S-1459-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.
Sponsored by Bill Cassidy (R-LA)
What it does
This bill would make several changes to the existing federal historic rehabilitation tax credit (Section 47 of the Internal Revenue Code). It would allow the full 20% credit to be claimed in the year a rehabilitated building is placed in service, rather than spread over five years. It would create a new 30% credit for smaller rehabilitation projects (capped at $3.75 million in expenditures, or $5 million in rural areas), allow those small-project credits to be transferred to other taxpayers, lower the spending threshold that qualifies a building for the credit, eliminate the requirement to reduce a building's tax basis by the amount of the credit, and ease restrictions on tax-exempt entities leasing rehabilitated properties.
Who benefits
Developers and investors who rehabilitate certified historic structures, particularly those working on smaller or rural projects. Nonprofit organizations and community development entities that could now more easily use or transfer the credit. Historic preservation organizations and the communities they serve. Construction workers and contractors hired for rehabilitation projects. Local governments and surrounding property owners who benefit from revitalized historic buildings. Rural communities, which receive a higher spending cap under the small-project provision. Investors who purchase transferred credits, gaining a new tax planning tool.
Who is hurt
The federal Treasury, which would collect less tax revenue as a result of expanded credits — a cost ultimately borne by all taxpayers. Developers of new construction who compete with rehabilitated historic properties for tenants and buyers, and who do not receive equivalent tax incentives. Owners of non-historic older buildings who do not qualify for the credit and may face a competitive disadvantage. State and local governments that rely on federal tax base definitions may see indirect fiscal effects.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the existing five-year credit spread creates a financing mismatch that discourages investment, and that accelerating the credit to the year of service would unlock projects that currently cannot pencil out financially. They contend that the enhanced 30% credit for small projects addresses a well-documented gap: smaller historic buildings in rural and underserved communities are routinely bypassed because the economics do not support the transaction costs of the current credit structure. The transferability provision would allow developers without sufficient tax liability — such as nonprofits and small businesses — to monetize the credit by selling it, broadening participation beyond large institutional investors.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that expanding and accelerating a credit that already costs the federal government an estimated $1 billion or more annually adds to the deficit without clear evidence that the marginal projects unlocked would not have been rehabilitated through other means. They contend that the transferability mechanism for small projects creates new opportunities for tax shelter arrangements and administrative complexity, and that the basis adjustment elimination further erodes the tax base. Critics may also argue that federal historic preservation incentives disproportionately benefit wealthier urban neighborhoods and property owners, rather than the low-income communities most in need of economic development tools.