Articles 4 min read

Research and Development (R&D) Tax Credits: Why Process and Documentation Matter

The R&D tax credit under IRC §41 is a statutory tax incentive, not a discretionary benefit, designed to reward companies for investing in innovation in the United States. While the opportunity can be significant, the credit is highly technical and documentation driven.

At Withum, we believe the quality of an R&D tax credit study should be measured by how well it stands up to scrutiny by a taxing authority. Our approach is grounded in consistent standards designed to produce accurate, supportable, and audit ready results.

A Technical First Evaluation, Not a Financial Shortcut

A common misconception is that R&D tax credits can be approximated from financial data alone. In practice, a defensible study begins with a technical analysis of activities, not just a review of a profit-and-loss statement.

Our process starts with:

Only after establishing a clear understanding of the underlying activities do we then quantify the associated costs.

Why it matters: Financial-only approaches can lead to overstated or unsupported R&D tax credit claims. The IRS expects a clear nexus between qualified activities and qualified expenses, and that linkage can only be established through a disciplined technical review. Beginning with the 2026 tax year, Form 6765 will require a demonstration of this nexus to even file an R&D tax credit claim.

Fixed-Fee Engagements that Promote Objectivity

Contingency-based fee structures inherently tie compensation to the size of the credit. This dynamic can introduce bias and increase audit risk by incentivizing positions that may not be fully supportable. At Withum, we structure our R&D tax credit studies on a fixed-fee basis.

Why we take this approach:

Our philosophy: A well-scoped study with proper upfront diligence should allow for predictable pricing. The focus should be on getting the answer right, not getting the largest answer possible.

Comprehensive Data Collection and Substantiation

A defensible R&D tax credit study requires more than high-level employee lists or generalized cost pools. Our process involves granular data collection and validation across all categories of qualified research expenditures (QREs), including:

Why it matters: Inadequate substantiation is one of the most common reasons credits are disallowed. Tax courts have consistently reinforced this standard, including cases in which taxpayers failed to provide sufficient documentation of qualified activities and their related costs.

Audit-Ready Documentation as a Baseline Standard

Our goal is not simply to calculate an R&D tax credit; it is to produce an R&D tax credit study that is prepared to withstand IRS review.

This includes:

We design every study with the expectation that it could be examined. This mindset drives both the depth of our analysis and the structure of our documentation.

Why it matters: The IRS and state taxing authorities have increased scrutiny of R&D tax credit claims in recent years, placing greater emphasis on documentation and claim completeness at the time of filing. A reactive approach to substantiation is no longer sufficient. Proactive defensibility must be built into the study from the outset.

Process Drives Outcomes

An R&D tax credit study is only as strong as the process behind it. An approach grounded in technical analysis, supported by detailed documentation, and structured to promote objectivity produces results that taxpayers can rely on with confidence.

At Withum, our methodology reflects a simple principle: An R&D tax credit that cannot be defended is not a benefit, it is a risk.

By focusing on transparency and audit readiness, we help ensure that R&D tax credits deliver lasting value, not uncertainty.

Complimentary R&D Tax Credit Assessment

Withum offers a no-obligation complimentary R&D tax credit assessment, beginning with a brief 30-minute discussion. This conversation is designed to quickly determine whether an R&D tax credit opportunity exists and how Withum can assist in calculating, documenting, and supporting your credit through our innovative R&D tax credit studies.

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