Short answer. You can claim both, and Nebraska is unusually tied to the federal credit: the Nebraska credit is 15 percent of the federal Section 41 credit you already computed, or 35 percent for research at a Nebraska college or university, apportioned to Nebraska. Nebraska is refundable, so a pre-revenue company can receive it as cash while the federal credit is not, and both rest on the same federal qualified-research records.

Key facts

Claim both?Yes, and Nebraska is computed from the federal credit
Federal rate20% regular / 14% ASC
Nebraska rate15% of the federal credit (35% university research)
Nebraska refundable?Yes, paid as cash
FormsForm 6765 (federal) + Form 3800N (Nebraska)

Nebraska is computed from your federal credit

Most states run their own calculation. Nebraska starts from the federal number you already have.

The Nebraska credit is 15 percent of the federal Section 41 credit you are allowed, or 35 percent for research conducted at a Nebraska college or university. There is no separate Nebraska base to calculate, so you compute the federal credit on Form 6765 first, then apply the Nebraska percentage to the portion apportioned to Nebraska.

Because Nebraska rides on the federal figure, the two credits are claimed together by design. A company doing 75 percent of its research in Nebraska applies the rate to 75 percent of its federal credit, and the Nebraska amount is one multiplication once the federal number is set.

Federal Section 41 vs. Nebraska, factor by factor

Nebraska is a percentage of the federal credit, with one big difference: it pays out in cash.

FactorFederal Section 41Nebraska
What it isCredit for increasing research activitiesNebraska Advantage Research and Development credit
How it is computedYour QRE over a base15% of the federal credit (35% university research)
Credit rate20% regular / 14% ASC15% of the federal credit, apportioned to Nebraska
RefundableNo - a QSB may offset up to $500,000 of payroll tax under Section 41(h)Yes, paid as cash
Where research must occurUnited StatesNebraska only
How you claim itForm 6765 with the federal returnForm 3800N with the Nebraska return
Claim alongside the other?Yes, compute the federal credit firstYes, it is a slice of the federal number
DocumentationFour-part test and QRE substantiation (Treas. Reg. 1.41-4)Same federal QRE, apportioned to Nebraska activity

The difference that matters: Nebraska pays cash

The federal credit reduces tax you owe. Nebraska can hand a pre-revenue company money.

The Nebraska credit is a refundable income tax credit, so an amount beyond your Nebraska tax is paid out as cash rather than only carried forward. A pre-revenue company with no Nebraska income tax can still receive it. The federal credit is nonrefundable, though a qualified small business can offset up to $500,000 of payroll tax under Section 41(h).

A company may instead elect to use the Nebraska credit against state sales and use taxes. Which option fits your position, and whether you qualify at all, is a determination for your CPA.

One evidence base for both

Because Nebraska is built from the federal credit, the federal records are the whole story.

Nebraska starts from the federal Section 41 credit, so the four-part test analysis and the wage, contractor, and supply records that substantiate the federal claim under Treas. Reg. 1.41-4 are exactly what support the Nebraska figure, apportioned to in-state activity. There is no second evidence base to build.

R&D Binder documents the federal Section 41 four-part test that both credits depend on, with Nebraska handled as a state add-on from the same records. Eligibility and the choice of credits remain a determination for your CPA.

The full state overview, the federal Section 41 work it builds on, and related state guides:

Sources

Every claim on this page traces to a primary authority. Each source below is independent and verifiable.

Get documentation built to survive an exam

R&D Binder produces the federal Section 41 binder and the Nebraska state workpaper from one engagement, both built to survive an exam.