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Understanding Transferability: Selling Your Renewable Energy Tax Credits

By Louis Dranbauer - Sales Associate - Renewable Energy

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For developers and sponsors of renewable energy projects, tax credits can be a powerful tool for unlocking capital. But what happens when your project generates tax credits like the Investment Tax Credit (ITC) or Production Tax Credit (PTC), and you don’t have the tax liability to fully utilize them?

That’s where transferability comes in.

What Is Transferability?

Transferability allows eligible entities to sell federal tax credits from renewable energy projects to third parties, such as corporations or financial institutions, in exchange for cash. This mechanism, introduced under Section 6418 of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), enables developers to monetize their tax credits directly without needing to enter a complex tax equity partnership.

Think of it as a way to convert your earned tax credits into working capital that supports your project’s cash flow or reinvestment strategy.

Why It Matters

Historically, developers without sufficient tax appetite needed to partner with tax equity investors. That process can be expensive, slow, and difficult to access for smaller or early-stage projects. With transferability:

  • Project sponsors maintain more ownership and control
  • Transactions are simpler and faster than traditional tax equity structures
  • Capital is unlocked earlier in the development cycle
  • A broader pool of credit buyers creates competitive pricing

In short, transferability is making renewable energy finance more accessible and more flexible.

How the Process Works

Here’s a high-level overview of how transferring tax credits typically works:

  1. Eligibility & Credit Generation
    The project earns eligible credits, such as Section 48 ITC or Section 45 PTC.
  2. Transfer Election
    The project sponsor elects to transfer the credit by filing IRS Form 3800 along with the appropriate schedules.
  3. Credit Buyer Matchmaking
    The sponsor works with an advisor or broker, like Fallbrook, to identify a buyer, typically a company with predictable federal tax liability.
  4. Negotiation & Sale Agreement
    The parties finalize terms, including the purchase price, timing, and any risk-sharing provisions.
  5. Payment & Reporting
    The buyer pays cash to the seller. Both parties report the transfer in their tax filings. The buyer can use the credit, but cannot resell it.

Key Considerations

Timing is critical: The credit must be transferred in the year it is generated.

Due diligence is essential for buyers: Credit quality, documentation, and compliance must be clear and verified.

Transfer pricing varies: Market conditions, credit type, and perceived risk typically result in pricing between 80 and 95 cents per dollar of credit.

The Bottom Line

Transferability is changing the way renewable energy projects are financed. It increases liquidity, simplifies funding structures, and opens the market to a wider range of participants.

At Fallbrook Financial Services, we help project sponsors structure, market, and execute tax credit transfers to maximize value and ensure compliance. Whether you are planning your first credit transfer or managing a portfolio of projects, our team is here to support your goals.

Have questions about transferring your tax credits? Contact us at team@fallbrookfinance.com.


Fallbrook Financial Services is a leading advisor in tax credit monetization, specializing in renewable energy, affordable housing, and entertainment finance. We connect developers with institutional capital and offer tailored strategies across more than 40 state and federal incentive programs.

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