a) Eligibility for
Credit
1) Beginning with tax years ending on
or after December 31, 2000, each corporate taxpayer is entitled to a credit
against the tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of the Act
in:
A) an amount equal to 30% of the start-up
costs expended by the corporate taxpayer to provide a child care facility for
the children of its employees; plus
B) 5% of the annual amount paid by the
corporate taxpayer in providing the child care facility for the children of its
employees. (IITA Section 210.5(a))
2) The 30% credit for start-up costs is
allowed only for tax years ending on or before December 31, 2004, and on or
after December 31, 2007. The 5% credit for annual expenses is allowed for all
years ending on or after December 31, 2000. Both parts of the credit are exempt
from the sunset provisions of IITA Section 250.
b) To receive the tax credit under IITA
Section 210.5, a corporate taxpayer must either independently provide and
operate a child care facility for the children of its employees or join in a
partnership with one or more other corporations to jointly provide and operate
a child care facility for the children of employees of the corporations in the
partnership. (IITA Section 210.5(a)) Amounts paid to a child care facility that
is not operated by the taxpayer or by such a partnership do not qualify for the
credit. For purposes of this credit, a "child care facility" is limited to a
child care facility located in Illinois. (IITA Section 210.5(c))
c) For purposes of this credit, the term
"start-up costs" qualifying for the 30% credit means the cost of planning,
site-preparation, construction, renovation, or acquisition of a child care
facility. (IITA Section 210.5(c)) Such costs are the capital expenditures
incurred in creating a new facility or expanding an existing facility, both
tangible and intangible. In the case of a capitalized asset, the 30% credit is
allowed in the year the asset is placed in service in the child care facility.
1) Uncapitalized expenses incurred in
connection with the child care facility prior to commencing operations are
start-up costs. For example, salaries paid prior to the opening of the facility
to the employees hired to operate the facility are start-up costs. Such
expenses qualify for the 30% credit in the tax year expensed, even if the
facility is not in operation by the end of the tax year.
2) Capital expenditures that are expensed
rather than depreciated under IRC section 179 qualify as start-up costs in the
same manner as expenditures that are actually capitalized and
amortized.
3) In the case of
property previously acquired by the taxpayer and later converted to use in the
child care facility, the start-up cost shall be the adjusted basis of such
property at the time of conversion, plus any capital costs of renovation or
modification to make the property ready for use in the child care
facility.
4) Any expenditure that
qualifies for the federal employer-provided child care credit as an amount paid
or incurred to acquire, construct, rehabilitate or expand property to be used
in a new or expanded child care facility under the provisions of IRC section
45F(c)(1)(A)(i) shall qualify for the 30% credit, even if the requirements of
IRC section 45F(c)(1)(A)(i)(II) or (III) are not met and provided that the
facility is operated by the employer corporation or a partnership described in
subsection (b).
EXAMPLE: An employer acquires a building to be used as a
child care facility and the land on which the building is located. The cost of
the building qualifies for the federal credit, but the cost of the land does
not qualify because IRC section 45F(c)(1)(A)(i)(II) provides that only
depreciable property may qualify for the federal credit. The cost of both the
building and the land will qualify for the credit allowed under this IITA
Section 210.5.
d) The annual amount paid by the employer
qualifying for the 5% credit shall include all expenses (including depreciation
and amortization) incurred in connection with the operation of the child care
facility that are deducted during the taxable year. Depreciation and
amortization of capitalized items and IRC section 179 deductions qualify for
the credit whenever the original expenditure qualified as a start-up cost for
the 30% credit, provided that the asset continues to be used in the operation
of the child care facility. In the year the facility commences operations, only
expenses deductible in the period after the commencement of operations qualify
for the 5% credit. Expenses of the facility deducted prior to the commencement
of operations qualify only for the 30% credit as start-up costs. Any expense
qualifying for the federal employer-provided child care credit under IRC
section 45F(c)(1)(A)(ii) for a tax year shall also qualify for the 5% credit in
the same tax year. Any expense for which the employer claims the 5% credit
authorized under this Section cannot qualify for the 5% Dependent Care
Assistance Program Credit under IITA Section 210. (See IITA Section
210.5(a))
e) Any credit allowed
under this Section that is unused in the year the credit is earned may be
carried forward and applied to the tax liability of the 5 taxable years
following the excess credit year until it is used. (IITA Section 210.5(b)) Any
30% credit earned in tax years ending on or before the December 31, 2004 sunset
date may be carried forward to tax years ending after that date. The credit
must be applied to the earliest year for which there is a tax liability. If
there are credits from more than one tax year that are available to offset a
liability, then the earlier credit must be applied first. (IITA Section
210(b))
f) A corporate taxpayer
claiming the credit provided by IITA Section 210.5 needs to maintain records
sufficient to document the costs associated with the provision of a child care
facility and the "start-up costs" expended to provide a child care facility.
Documentation must take the form of vouchers paid, cancelled checks or other
proof of payment. Should the expenditure not be solely for child care, the
documentation should explain how the amount allocated for child care was
determined. If the child care provided includes care for non-employee children,
the costs must be allocated between employee children and non-employee
children. The method of allocation used must be reasonable and
documented.
g) The credit is
allowed only to corporations subject to tax under IITA Section 201(a) and (b).
Neither subchapter S corporations nor shareholders of subchapter S corporations
are allowed to claim the credit.