Tax Credits (FTC, GBC)

Form 3800: Filing the General Business Credit

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Key Takeaways

  • Form 3800 combines all individual business credits under one umbrella
  • Individual credits are calculated on separate forms, then brought to Form 3800
  • The GBC has an overall limitation based on net tax liability minus other credits and TMT
  • Excess credits carry back 1 year and carry forward 20 years
  • The 20-year carryforward means credits are rarely lost entirely

Form 3800: The General Business Credit Form

Form 3800 is where all individual business credit calculations come together. It is not where you calculate each credit — those calculations happen on separate forms (Form 6765 for R&D, Form 3468 for energy credits, etc.). Form 3800 is where you add up all the individual credits and apply the overall limitation.

How the Limitation Works

The GBC is limited to your net income tax liability minus certain other credits and the tentative minimum tax (AMT-related). This prevents the GBC from reducing your tax below a floor amount. Any credits that exceed the limitation are not lost — they carry back 1 year and carry forward up to 20 years.

The 20-year carryforward is very generous, meaning even if you cannot use the credits today, they will benefit you for decades.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to file Form 3800 if I only have one business credit?

Generally yes. Even with a single business credit, Form 3800 is used to apply the overall limitation and determine the allowable credit amount for the year.

Can I choose which credits to use first?

Credits are generally applied in a specific order under the tax code, with certain credits taking priority over others based on their carryback/carryforward periods.

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