R&D Tax Credits for Startups: The Complete Guide to Claiming What You've Earned
R&D Tax Credits for Startups: The Complete 2026 Guide
Introduction: The Tax Credit Most Startups Miss
Here's a financial fact that surprises most founders: the average startup leaves $50,000 to $250,000 on the table by not claiming R&D tax credits they've already earned.
The Internal Revenue Service made this intentional. The federal R&D tax credit (Section 41) was designed specifically to encourage innovation by rewarding companies that invest in research and development. Yet despite being available since 1981, fewer than 15% of small businesses and startups claim it.
Think about what your team actually does every day. If you're building a SaaS platform, developing an AI model, creating custom hardware, or inventing new processes, you're almost certainly doing qualifying research and development work. The IRS doesn't care if you're in a garage or a skyscraper—if you're experimenting and innovating to solve uncertain problems, you likely qualify.
The numbers are real: - Startups typically save 10-15% of their total R&D spending through federal tax credits - A 20-person engineering team can generate $30,000-$60,000 in annual credits - Early-stage AI companies have claimed credits worth $100,000+ in their first few years - Hardware startups often qualify for 15-20% refunds on salaries spent on qualifying work
This guide walks you through everything you need to know about R&D tax credits, whether you can claim them, how much you might save, and exactly how to do it. If your startup spends money on development, engineering, or innovation—which virtually all do—this is potentially the easiest money you'll leave unclaimed.
What Actually Qualifies as R&D for Tax Credit Purposes?
The IRS doesn't make this easy. "Research and development" has a specific technical definition for tax credit purposes, and it's narrower than you might think.
The 4-Part Test
To qualify for the R&D tax credit, your work must pass all four of these tests:
1. The Business Purpose Test Your development work must be undertaken to discover information that could help your business. This is broad—it includes building your product, inventing new processes, improving existing products, or solving business problems through innovation. It does not include pure scientific research with no commercial intent.
2. The Uncertainty Test (The Most Important One) This is where many startups go wrong. The work must address a "technical uncertainty." This means: at the time you started, there was no readily available way to achieve your objective based on existing knowledge. You couldn't just Google it or ask a consultant—you had to figure it out through experimentation.
Examples of qualifying uncertainty: - "How do we build a real-time data pipeline that can handle 10M events per second?" - "What's the optimal algorithm for detecting fraud in our specific use case?" - "How do we manufacture this component at scale without it breaking?"
Examples that DON'T qualify: - Customizing off-the-shelf software to your needs - Implementing a known solution from Stack Overflow - Routine debugging and maintenance work - Simply learning a new programming language or framework
3. The Process of Experimentation Test You must use systematic approaches to resolve the uncertainty—trying different approaches, testing hypotheses, iterating on solutions. This is the core of what qualifies as R&D. Documentation matters here (more on this later).
4. The Qualified Expenditure Test The costs must fall into specific categories. Eligible expenses include: - Wages for employees directly engaged in qualifying R&D work - Contractor costs for contractors working on R&D projects - Supplies used in the R&D process (but not equipment over $5,000) - Cloud computing and SaaS costs related to R&D work (AWS, GitHub, etc.) - Cost of goods sold for products you developed in-house
NOT eligible: - Management and planning costs - General business operations - Routine customer support - Training and education
Real-World Examples by Company Type
SaaS Company: Your engineers spend 3 months building a new feature that dynamically adjusts pricing based on user behavior. The pricing algorithm required testing multiple machine learning models. This qualifies because: (1) business purpose exists, (2) the optimal ML approach was technically uncertain, (3) you used experimentation to test models, and (4) you're spending employee wages.
Hardware Startup: You're manufacturing a custom sensor. Your manufacturing team spends 6 months figuring out how to produce it reliably at scale while keeping costs under $50 per unit. The original design didn't work in production. This qualifies because you were resolving technical uncertainties through iterative manufacturing processes.
Biotech Startup: You're validating a new diagnostic test. You run dozens of experiments, fail many times, and refine your approach. Clear qualification here.
AI/ML Startup: You're building a model for a specific business application. The process of selecting architectures, testing different training approaches, optimizing performance—all qualify. The fact that you're "just" writing code doesn't matter. The experimentation to make it work counts.
How Much Can Your Startup Actually Save?
The dollar amounts depend on three factors: how much you spend on R&D, what percentage of your payroll qualifies, and your tax rate.
The Basic Calculation
The federal R&D tax credit comes in two flavors:
Standard Credit (15% of qualified costs over baseline) Most startups use this method. It provides a 15% credit on the amount your R&D spending exceeds a baseline. For early-stage startups with less than $5 million in annual revenue, there's a special simplified credit: 20% of qualifying costs.
Real Examples
Example 1: Early-Stage SaaS Startup (Seed Stage) - Team: 4 engineers - Average salary: $120,000/year - Estimated 60% of their time on R&D: $288,000 - Cloud computing costs on R&D: $24,000 - Total qualifying expenses: $312,000 - Credit claimed (20% for early-stage): $62,400 - If the founder is in the 32% tax bracket: $19,968 additional cash or credit carryforward
Example 2: Growth-Stage B2B SaaS ($2M ARR) - Team: 12 engineers - Average salary: $135,000/year - Estimated 70% of R&D allocation: $1,134,000 - Contract engineering: $80,000 - SaaS and dev tools: $48,000 - Total qualifying expenses: $1,262,000 - Federal credit (15%, accounting for baseline): $189,300 - Additional state credits (varies by state): $25,000-$75,000 - Total credits: $214,000-$264,000
Example 3: Hardware Startup (Series A) - Engineering team: 8 people - Manufacturing team testing: 3 people - Salary + manufacturing labor: $480,000 - Materials and supplies for prototyping: $120,000 (materials under $5,000/item qualify) - Contract design services: $60,000 - Total qualifying expenses: $660,000 - Federal credit (15%): $99,000 - Potential WOTC (Work Opportunity Tax Credit) coordination: +$20,000 - Total: $119,000
Example 4: AI/ML Startup (Series B, $10M funding) - Research and development team: 15 people - Average salary: $150,000/year - 80% time allocation on R&D: $1,800,000 - GPU cloud computing (Paperspace, Lambda Labs): $180,000 - ML platforms and tools: $60,000 - Total qualifying expenses: $2,040,000 - Federal credit (15% with baseline): $280,000-$306,000 - State credits (CA, MA, NY offer generous R&D credits): $80,000-$150,000 - Total potential credits: $360,000-$456,000
The Payroll Tax Credit Option
There's another mechanism that's particularly powerful for startups: the qualified small business payroll tax credit, also called the Section 41(h) election.
Instead of carrying R&D credits forward against future income taxes, eligible startups can claim up to $250,000 annually against their payroll taxes. This is often better for pre-profitable startups because:
You get the credit now, not when you're profitable
You don't need positive tax liability to benefit
It's refundable for startups with less than $5M in gross receipts
How it works: Instead of a 15% credit on income, you might claim 6% credit against payroll tax. It's smaller percentagewise, but it's cash in hand, not a deferred tax benefit.
The Startup-Specific Payroll Tax Credit (Section 41 / Form 6765)
For most founders, the payroll tax credit is the most practical way to claim R&D benefits, especially before profitability. Here's exactly how it works.
Who Qualifies?
Corporations with less than $5 million in gross receipts in the current year
All C-corporations that have no more than $5 million in gross receipts for all prior years combined
S-corps and partnerships are eligible if formed in the current year
If you meet these requirements, the payroll tax credit becomes far more valuable because it's refundable. You can claim up to $250,000 per year.
The Numbers
If your startup qualifies and you claim the Section 41(h) election: - You calculate your R&D credit normally (15-20% of qualifying expenses) - You can claim it against payroll taxes paid to the Social Security Administration - If your credit exceeds your payroll taxes, the difference is refunded to you as cash
Example: Your startup has $1,000,000 in qualifying R&D expenses and qualifies for the 20% credit under the simplified method. That's $200,000 in credits. Your annual payroll taxes are $120,000. You claim $120,000 against payroll taxes and get a check for $80,000.
The Form
You claim this on Form 6765 (Credit for Increasing Research Activities). Most startups will use the "Alternative Simplified Credit" method for easier calculation.
R&D Tax Credits by Startup Type
Not all startups claim R&D credits the same way. Here's what's specific to your industry.
SaaS and Software Startups
What Typically Qualifies: - Core product development and new features - Performance optimization (making your product faster, more reliable) - Infrastructure and backend development - Security improvements and bug fixes (if experimental in nature) - Testing and QA related to new features - DevOps and platform reliability work
What Doesn't Qualify: - Routine bug fixes (standard debugging) - Customer customization and implementation - Documentation and content creation - Sales tools and analytics dashboards - Administrative and operational software
Common Claim Size: $30,000-$150,000+ annually depending on team size
Pro Tip: Document which engineers are on R&D work with a percentage allocation. SaaS companies often have 50-75% of engineering time on core product R&D, which is significant.
AI/ML Startups
What Typically Qualifies: - Model architecture research and experimentation - Training pipeline development - Data pipeline engineering and optimization - Feature engineering and selection - Hyperparameter tuning and optimization - Evaluation framework development - Integration of novel techniques - Hardware optimization for inference
What Doesn't Qualify: - Using pre-built models or APIs without modification - Standard ML library usage (using TensorFlow as documented) - Data labeling and annotation - Basic model deployment
Common Claim Size: $100,000-$400,000+ annually (AI companies spend heavily on compute and engineering)
Pro Tip: GPU and cloud computing costs are qualifying expenses. Document your experimental approaches—trying different models, architectures, training methods, etc. Keep records of which experiments worked and which didn't.
Hardware Startups
What Typically Qualifies: - Design and prototyping work - Manufacturing process development - Quality testing and reliability testing - Component integration and compatibility testing - Firmware development for custom hardware - Supply chain optimization related to technical challenges - Design iteration based on testing results
What Doesn't Qualify: - Pure manufacturing (once process is proven) - Routine assembly and production - Aesthetic design changes - Standard supplier negotiation
Common Claim Size: $80,000-$300,000+ annually depending on team size and prototyping intensity
Pro Tip: Track all prototyping materials and labor—hardware companies often underestimate what qualifies. Failed prototypes and discarded iterations count too.
Biotech and Healthcare Startups
What Typically Qualifies: - Research on novel compounds or approaches - Clinical validation and testing protocols - Device development and testing - Manufacturing process development for biologics - Regulatory pathway research and validation - Animal studies and preliminary testing - Assay development
What Doesn't Qualify: - Standard regulatory compliance work - Routine quality assurance - Administrative regulatory work
Common Claim Size: $150,000-$500,000+ annually (these are research-heavy companies)
Pro Tip: Biotech credits are substantial but require meticulous documentation. Keep detailed lab notes and experimental protocols.
Step-by-Step: How to Claim Your R&D Tax Credit
The process to claim R&D credits has several stages. Here's the practical path to claiming them.
Step 1: Document Your R&D Work (The Foundation)
This is the most critical step. You need to identify and document qualifying R&D activities before you claim the credit.
What to document: 1. Project descriptions - What problem were you solving? Why was it technically uncertain? 2. Timeline and labor allocation - Which employees worked on R&D? How many hours did they spend? 3. Wage records - Total compensation for each employee 4. Supplier invoices - Cloud computing, software, supplies used in R&D 5. Project records - Code repositories, design documents, lab notes, testing logs 6. Technical descriptions - What did you try? How did it fail? What did you learn?
Tools that help: - Time tracking software (Toggl, Harvest) to track R&D hours - Version control logs (GitHub, GitLab) showing development activity - Project management tools (Jira, Linear, Asana) documenting project work - Email records showing problem-solving discussions - Prototype photos and iteration records
Step 2: Quantify Your Qualifying Expenses
Gather all the financial data:
Wages: Add up the total compensation (salary, bonuses, payroll taxes) for employees who worked on R&D
Contract labor: Invoices from contractors, agencies, and freelancers doing R&D work
Supplies: Costs of materials, software, tools used (under $5,000 per item)
Cloud and SaaS: AWS, Google Cloud, GitHub, dev tools, testing platforms used for R&D
COGS for developed products: If you manufactured products, some production costs count
Sample calculation from real numbers: - 3 engineers at $120k = $360,000 wages - 1 designer at $80k (50% R&D) = $40,000 - Cloud computing (AWS, GitHub, etc.) = $24,000 - Development tools and licenses = $8,000 - Total = $432,000
Step 3: Determine Your Credit Method
Most startups use one of two methods. Choose based on your situation:
Method A: Simplified Credit (Easiest for Startups) - 15-20% of qualifying expenses (no baseline to calculate) - Faster to claim - Better for pre-revenue or early-stage startups - Recommended for most founders
Method B: Regular Credit (More Complex) - 15% of qualifying costs above a baseline - Baseline is calculated from your prior year gross receipts - Better for companies with consistent R&D spending over multiple years - Requires more documentation
For your first claim or if you're unclear, the simplified credit is almost always the way to go.
Step 4: Assemble Your Documentation Package
Gather all supporting materials: - Employment records and payroll tax filings - Invoices and receipts - Time tracking and labor allocation records - Technical documentation of R&D projects - Project documentation (GitHub repos, design docs, etc.) - Email threads and project notes
The IRS rarely audits R&D credits for startups, but when they do, documentation is everything. You need to tell a coherent story: "Here's the problem we faced, here's why the solution was technically uncertain, here's what we tried, here's the people and money we spent, and here's the result."
Step 5: File Form 6765
Your tax advisor or CPA will file Form 6765 (Credit for Increasing Research Activities) with your business tax return.
If you qualify for the payroll tax credit: - Elect Section 41(h) on the form - Claim credits against employment taxes - File for a refund of any excess
Timeline: - File with your regular tax return (typically April 15 for calendar year) - If filing separately to accelerate the refund, Form 1139 (for corporations) or Form 1040-X (for individuals)
Step 6: Track and Maintain for Future Years
Going forward, maintain organized records for each year: - Continue documenting R&D projects - Keep time allocation records - Maintain payroll and expense records - Update your technical documentation
R&D credits can be claimed retroactively for up to 3 years, so if you haven't been claiming, there's money waiting.
Common Mistakes That Reduce or Invalidate Your Credit
Even when startups qualify for substantial credits, they often lose money through preventable mistakes.
Mistake 1: Not Documenting Anything Until Tax Time
The worst approach: waiting until your accountant asks about R&D in November, then trying to remember what you did all year.
The fix: Document as you go. Have engineers note what they're working on in your project management tool. Have a simple spreadsheet tracking R&D projects and team allocation. This takes 10 minutes a month, not 10 hours in December.
Mistake 2: Claiming Routine Bug Fixes as R&D
The IRS distinguishes between developing new functionality and fixing bugs. A bug in production that you fix quickly? That's operations. Spending weeks debugging an algorithmic issue because the solution was uncertain? That's R&D.
The line: Did you know the solution existed but hadn't coded it? Then it's not R&D. Were you figuring out how to solve a problem that had no known solution? That's R&D.
Mistake 3: Including Routine Customization and Implementation
Customizing off-the-shelf software for your customers doesn't qualify. Building the platform itself does. Building a custom integration? Only if there was genuine technical uncertainty in how to accomplish it, not just typical programming work.
Mistake 4: Overcounting Time Allocation
Saying your entire engineering team spends 100% of their time on R&D is a red flag. Real allocations are usually 50-75% for product companies (rest is maintenance, ops, customer work). If you estimate too high, auditors will reduce your claim.
The fix: Be realistic. Document what you actually did. A 70% allocation for a SaaS company is totally defensible. Claiming 100% triggers scrutiny.
Mistake 5: Not Tracking Cloud Computing and Tool Costs
Many startups forget to claim cloud computing costs. If you're spending $2,000/month on AWS or GPU compute for R&D work, that's $24,000/year you might miss. Same with GitHub, Figma, design tools, development software.
Mistake 6: Mixing R&D with Customer Work
If a developer works Monday-Wednesday on your product and Thursday-Friday on customer customization, you can only claim 60% of their wages. Many startups claim 100% incorrectly.
The fix: Use time tracking. Have engineers note their time allocation realistically.
Mistake 7: Claiming Wages Without Payroll Tax Filings
You can't claim wages that weren't paid through proper payroll. The IRS checks this against your 941 filings. Paying developers as 1099 contractors? That's fine—use the invoice amount. But you must have supporting documentation.
Mistake 8: Not Having a Technical Narrative
Saying "we spent $400k on engineering" doesn't qualify. The IRS needs to understand: - What was technically uncertain? - Why couldn't you just use an existing solution? - How did you use systematic experimentation? - What was the result?
Without this narrative, auditors disallow the credit.
How Proper Bookkeeping Makes R&D Tracking Easier
Here's where it gets practical for founders. The biggest barrier to claiming R&D credits isn't eligibility—most startups qualify. It's tracking.
This is why proper bookkeeping matters.
The Challenge Without Good Systems
Without organized bookkeeping and time tracking: - You can't easily identify which expenses were R&D vs. operations - You can't allocate labor to specific projects - You lose emails, invoices, and documentation - Your accountant spends 20+ hours reconstructing what you did - You probably leave money on the table
With Proper Systems in Place
When your bookkeeping is organized with R&D in mind: - Every invoice is categorized (R&D tools vs. operations) - Employee time is tracked and allocated to projects - Cloud computing spending is clearly organized by purpose - Your accountant can claim credits in a few hours, not days - You catch and claim credits you might otherwise miss
The specific approach:
Categorize expenses in your chart of accounts:
R&D Labor (separate from operations)
R&D Cloud Computing
R&D Tools and Software
R&D Supplies
R&D Contractors
Tag projects in your accounting software:
When you pay a developer, tag it to the project they're working on
When you pay for cloud computing, tag it R&D if it's development work
This takes seconds per transaction but creates massive audit trails
Use time tracking for labor:
Simple weekly updates of percent allocation
4 engineers × 80% allocation to R&D = 3.2 FTE for R&D
This creates defensible documentation
Create a simple R&D tracking document:
Monthly log of projects, who worked on them, and costs
Doesn't need to be complex—a spreadsheet with columns for project, team members, estimated hours, costs
Update it monthly, not retroactively
Example: Organizing R&D Bookkeeping
Chart of Accounts Setup:
6100 - R&D: Salaries & Wages
6101 - R&D: Contractor Fees
6102 - R&D: Cloud Computing & SaaS
6103 - R&D: Tools & Software
6104 - R&D: Supplies & Materials
6105 - R&D: Facilities Allocation
Monthly R&D Tracking Log: | Project | Team | Hours | Wages | Cloud | Tools | Total | |---------|------|-------|-------|-------|-------|--------| | ML Training Pipeline | Alice, Bob | 160 | $12,000 | $3,200 | $400 | $15,600 | | iOS App Security | Carol | 120 | $9,000 | $0 | $0 | $9,000 | | Data Infrastructure | Dave, Eve | 160 | $10,000 | $2,400 | $600 | $13,000 | | Monthly Total | | | $31,000 | $5,600 | $1,000 | $37,600 |
That's 6 months and you have $225,600 in documented R&D. At 20% credit, that's $45,120 in federal credit.
State-Level R&D Tax Credits (Don't Forget These)
While the federal R&D credit gets the attention, many states offer their own credits—and they're substantial.
States with the Most Generous R&D Credits
California - 15% credit on qualifying expenses - No state income tax limit for the credit - Can be used against other tax liabilities - Startup takeaway: A $500,000 California R&D credit is worth real money
Massachusetts - 15% credit on qualified research expenses - Particularly generous for software and biotech - One of the most founder-friendly states for R&D claims
New York - 9% credit (10% in certain industries) - Refundable for certain startups - Good coordination with federal credit
Illinois - 6.5% credit - Can offset personal income tax for S-corp owners - Underutilized by startups
Texas - No state income tax, but offers R&D franchise tax credit - 2.5% credit against gross margins - Valuable for manufacturing and hardware startups
Other Strong States: - Washington (no state income tax, but other credits available) - Nevada (no state income tax) - Utah (15% credit, very startup-friendly) - Connecticut (15% credit)
How State Credits Stack
The beautiful part: federal and state credits stack. If you're in California and claim a federal credit of $100,000, you can often claim a separate California credit of another $50,000-$75,000. If you're in Massachusetts, similar math applies.
Example: Boston-based SaaS startup - Federal R&D credit: $120,000 - Massachusetts state credit (15%): $100,000 - Total credits: $220,000
Example: San Francisco AI startup - Federal R&D credit: $200,000 - California state credit (15%): $200,000 - Total credits: $400,000
The exact amounts vary based on your tax situation, but the principle holds: don't claim just federal. Research your state's program.
FAQ: Your Questions About R&D Tax Credits Answered
Q: Can we claim R&D credits if we're not profitable yet?
A: Yes, absolutely. In fact, many early-stage startups get the most value from R&D credits precisely because they're not profitable. Through the payroll tax credit (Section 41(h)), you can get cash refunds of up to $250,000/year even if you have no tax liability. This is one of the few ways the government actually pays pre-revenue startups for R&D.
Q: What if we use offshore contractors for R&D work?
A: Foreign contractors' costs can qualify if the work is performed for your U.S. business. However, there's complexity here—wages paid to non-U.S. entities get reduced credit treatment (6% instead of 15%). It's still valuable to claim, but document carefully. W-2 employees and 1099 contractors both count, but wages are treated more favorably.
Q: How far back can we claim R&D credits?
A: You can file amended returns for up to 3 years of prior R&D work. Many startups have 1-3 years of qualifying R&D they've never claimed. If you're 2 years in and just learning about this, file amended 2024 and 2025 returns. The process takes 3-4 months for refunds, but the money is real.
Q: Do we need to be incorporated as a C-corp to claim credits?
A: No. S-corps, LLCs taxed as S-corps, and even sole proprietorships can claim R&D credits. The filing method changes slightly (Form 3800 vs. Form 6765 depending on entity type), but eligibility is the same. Discuss with your tax advisor based on your entity structure.
Q: What if we use open-source libraries and frameworks?
A: You can still claim credits. Using existing tools doesn't disqualify you—the question is whether you were doing qualifying R&D with those tools. Using TensorFlow to build a model? The model development qualifies. Configuring WordPress? That probably doesn't. It's about what you built and the uncertainty you resolved.
Q: Do hiring and people costs besides salaries count?
A: Salaries and wage-based compensation count. Payroll taxes count (employer-side Social Security and Medicare). Stock options and equity don't count. Contractor fees count. Benefits and bonuses (if included in wages) count. The focus is on cash compensation for actual work done.
Q: What's the IRS audit rate for R&D credits?
A: For small businesses, it's low—less than 1% for credits under $250,000 if your documentation is solid. The IRS is more interested in large corporation credits. That said, if you're audited, you need documentation. Have your records organized, technical narrative clear, and time allocations realistic.
Q: Can we claim credits for past years we didn't claim?
A: Yes. You can file amended returns (Form 1120-X for corporations, Form 1040-X for individuals) for up to 3 prior years. If you've been in business for 4 years and never claimed, file for years 2-4. Many startups discover they left $100k+ unclaimed. File amended returns within the 3-year window.
Q: How long does it take to claim R&D credits?
A: From organization to claiming: 2-3 months if your accounting is clean, 4-6 months if you need to reconstruct records. Once filed, federal refunds take 3-6 months. State credits vary by state but usually 4-8 weeks. You can file expedited claims (Form 3115 for corporations) to accelerate some refunds.
Q: Do R&D credits reduce our deductions for expenses we claim them on?
A: Yes, there's a coordination rule. If you claim a wage as an R&D credit, you have to reduce your deduction for that wage on your tax return. This isn't double-dipping—it's a technical tax adjustment. Your tax software or advisor handles this, but it's important to know. The credit is still valuable (it's a dollar-for-dollar reduction in taxes owed, while deductions are worth 21-37% depending on your bracket).
The Takeaway: Claiming R&D Credits Is Possible (and Profitable)
If you're building software, developing hardware, inventing new processes, or researching solutions to uncertain technical problems, you almost certainly qualify for R&D tax credits. The average startup leaves tens of thousands of dollars unclaimed.
The process is straightforward: document your R&D work, quantify expenses, and claim the credit. The barrier isn't complexity or eligibility—it's simply that most founders don't know these credits exist or how to claim them.
Getting started: 1. Review the 4-part test and assess your current work—are you solving technical uncertainties through experimentation? 2. Identify your total R&D-related spending (wages, contractors, cloud computing, tools) 3. Review your state's R&D credit program—there's likely more available than the federal credit 4. If you have 1-3 years of prior business, consider filing amended returns for unclaimed credits 5. Going forward, implement simple tracking: categorize expenses, note project allocation, document technical challenges
For most founders, the ROI on getting R&D credits organized is enormous. A few hours of documentation and organization today can mean $25,000-$100,000+ in credits over the next few years.
About Median: Getting Your R&D Credits Claimed Properly
This is where Median helps most founders. Getting R&D credits right requires three things: accurate financial data, proper categorization of expenses, and solid documentation of your R&D work.
Median handles the full R&D tax credit process: - Complete R&D study and documentation review - Expense categorization and proper accounting treatment - Form 6765 filing and payroll tax credit elections - State-level credit coordination and filing - Amended return filing for prior years
And here's the founder-friendly part: You only pay if you receive the credit. Median's pricing runs $99-$849/month for their full bookkeeping platform, which includes real-time dashboards, daily categorization, and integrated tax filing. For R&D credit services specifically, Median manages the study and filing with risk-free pricing—no credit, no fee.
This means you can afford to be thorough. Proper documentation of R&D often means finding 20-30% more in eligible credits than a quick back-of-napkin estimate. Median's daily AI categorization combined with human review catches cloud computing costs, tool subscriptions, and contractor expenses that many startups miss.
Get started: Visit medianfi.com to set up your bookkeeping foundation. Median's bookkeeping platform is built for founders and can be set up in a day. Once you have organized financial data and proper categorization, claiming R&D credits becomes straightforward—and Median handles the forms and filing.
R&D credits aren't free money, but they're money you've already earned through your work. The process of claiming them is simply documenting and organizing what you've already done. With proper bookkeeping, it's easier than you think.
Last Updated
February 2026. Tax law and credit eligibility can change. Review current IRS.gov resources and consult with a tax professional for your specific situation.