California has the most generous R&D tax credit in the country (15%, no cap, infinite carryforward) and $180M/year in negotiated job-creation credits through CalCompetes. Federal SBIR grants reach $305K per award for deep tech founders. This page breaks down every program worth your time, who each one actually serves, and where to start.
Start here: if you have qualifying R&D wages, file FTB Form 3523 with your next CA tax return (15% credit, infinite carryforward). For job creation, check CalCompetes at business.ca.gov. For non-dilutive grant funding, apply to NSF SBIR (up to $305K) or NIH SBIR (up to $323K) based on your sector.
Federal programs don't require California-specific eligibility, but California founders are especially well-positioned for several of them. The state's concentration of deep-tech talent in the Bay Area and Silicon Valley, biotech in San Diego and Los Angeles, and cleantech in the Inland Empire all align with what federal agencies fund most aggressively.
The federal R&D credit under IRC Section 41 gives you 20% of qualified research expenses (QREs) above your historical base, or 14% via the simpler Alternative Simplified Credit (ASC method). For most early-stage companies the ASC is the better choice: 14% of QREs above 50% of your 3-year average QRE, no historical reconstruction required.
The most important feature for pre-revenue California founders: Qualified Small Businesses (QSBs) can offset up to $500,000 per year in federal payroll taxes instead of income taxes. The IRA raised this cap from $250,000 to $500,000 effective for tax years beginning after December 31, 2022. A 12-person SaaS team paying $1.2M in engineer salaries can realistically recover $100K-$200K per year in payroll taxes before the company is profitable.
QSB eligibility: gross receipts under $5M for the current year and no gross receipts for more than 5 taxable years. File Form 6765 with your federal return; the elected credit then offsets payroll taxes starting with the first quarter after filing.
SBIR (Small Business Innovation Research) and STTR (Small Business Technology Transfer) are the federal government's primary non-dilutive grant programs for innovation-stage companies. Phase I awards prove technical feasibility; Phase II awards scale it up.
Key SBIR agencies for California founders in 2026:
| Agency | Phase I Award | Best Fit | Status (May 2026) |
|---|---|---|---|
| NSF | Up to $305,000 | Deep tech, AI, hardware, biotech, clean energy -- broad | Between intakes (Project Pitch submissions paused Apr 16, 2026) |
| NIH | Up to $323,090 | Biotech, digital health, medical devices, mental health tech | Between intakes -- next receipt date Sept 5, 2026 |
| DOE | Up to $200,000 | Clean energy, grid modernization, energy storage, advanced manufacturing | Check grants.gov for current solicitations |
| DoD | Up to $275,000 | Defense tech, sensors, cybersecurity, advanced materials, aerospace | Multiple topic areas open -- check DSIP portal |
NSF's America's Seed Fund is the most accessible for first-time applicants. The process starts with a 3,500-character Project Pitch (not a full proposal). Overall acceptance is about 12% from pitch to award. Most awards land at the $305,000 cap. There is no cost-sharing requirement and zero equity given up.
NIH SBIR runs three standard annual receipt cycles (September 5, January 5, April 5). If you're a San Diego biotech founder or a San Francisco digital health company, NIH SBIR is your primary federal grant path. The process is peer-reviewed by study section panels, so having a credible Principal Investigator with prior publications is a material advantage.
The American-Made Program runs prize competitions year-round across solar, energy storage, grid modernization, bioenergy, water, and advanced manufacturing. Prize awards range from $50K to $3M+ per challenge. Winners also receive national lab vouchers worth $25K-$100K in direct laboratory access -- a significant advantage for California cleantech founders who want to use facilities at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, SLAC, or other DOE facilities.
Unlike SBIR, American-Made challenges are staged: early phases are open to all; later phases require prior phase wins. There is no cost-sharing and no equity. California's cleantech density in the Bay Area, Sacramento, and the Inland Empire creates strong geographic clustering with DOE prize challenge topics.
The Section 48 ITC gives businesses a federal tax credit equal to 30% of the installed cost of qualifying clean energy property, including solar PV, energy storage (5 kWh+), geothermal, fuel cells, combined heat and power (CHP) systems, and small wind turbines. The 30% rate applies to projects under 1 MW output, or to any project where workers are paid prevailing wages and meet apprenticeship requirements for 5 years post-commissioning. Projects 1 MW or larger without prevailing wage compliance drop to a 6% base rate.
California's commercial solar economics make this especially relevant: a 500 kW rooftop solar installation costing $1M yields a $300,000 federal tax credit. The credit can be transferred (sold) to a third-party buyer for cash -- useful for early-stage companies with limited tax liability.
| Scenario | Credit Rate | Example: $1M Installation |
|---|---|---|
| Project under 1 MW (any technology) | 30% | $300,000 credit |
| Project 1 MW+, prevailing wage met | 30% | $300,000 credit |
| Project 1 MW+, no prevailing wage | 6% | $60,000 credit |
| Energy community bonus (stackable) | +10% | +$100,000 added |
| Domestic content bonus (stackable) | +10% | +$100,000 added |
The SBA 7(a) loan program backs loans up to $5M for almost any business purpose. Banks and credit unions originate the loans; the SBA guarantees 75-85% of principal. The FY2023 average 7(a) loan was about $479,685. Apply through an SBA-approved lender -- turnaround is 60-90 days for standard 7(a), or 2-4 weeks through a Preferred Lender Program (PLP) lender.
The SBA Microloan program funds up to $50,000 through nonprofit community lenders (intermediaries), not through SBA directly. Average loan is about $13,000. California has multiple active Microloan intermediaries in Los Angeles County, the Bay Area, San Diego, and the Central Valley. Most intermediaries pair the loan with free business training. Interest rates run 8-13%.
| Program | Max Amount | Use Case | How to Apply |
|---|---|---|---|
| SBA 7(a) | $5,000,000 | Real estate, equipment, working capital, acquisitions | Through an SBA-approved bank or lender |
| SBA Microloan | $50,000 | Startups, thin credit, equipment, working capital | Through a local nonprofit intermediary (not SBA) |
| SBA 504 | $5,500,000 | Commercial real estate, major fixed assets only | Through a Certified Development Company (CDC) |
| SBA Express | $500,000 | Faster working capital or credit lines | Through SBA Preferred Lenders, faster review |
California's Research and Development Tax Credit is the most valuable state-level incentive on this page. The Franchise Tax Board (FTB) administers it. Here is what makes it exceptional compared to other state R&D credits:
The catch: only research physically conducted in California counts. If your engineering team is split between San Francisco and Austin, only the California-located work qualifies. Building a project-by-location allocation table is the most audit-sensitive step in the CA R&D credit process -- and the most common source of partial disallowance.
File FTB Form 3523 with your California income tax return. C-corps file by the 15th of the 4th month after year-end (April 15 for calendar-year filers, 6-month extension available). Pass-through entities file by March 15.
| Feature | CA R&D Credit (Form 3523) | Federal Section 41 (Form 6765) |
|---|---|---|
| Standard rate | 15% of incremental CA QRE | 20% of incremental QRE (regular) or 14% ASC |
| University/basic research rate | 24% (CA institutions) | 20% (any qualified research org) |
| Annual cap | None | None (income tax); $500K/yr (payroll offset for QSBs) |
| Carryforward | Indefinite (no expiration) | 20 years |
| Refundable? | No -- income tax offset only | No -- but QSBs can offset payroll taxes |
| Geographic restriction | CA-located research only | US-located research |
| Stackable? | Yes -- stacks with federal | Yes -- stacks with CA credit |
CalCompetes is GO-Biz's flagship job-creation incentive. It works differently from most tax credits: instead of applying a formula to your expenses, you negotiate a credit amount with GO-Biz directly, then enter a 5-year performance agreement to create or retain full-time W-2 jobs in California.
Key facts for 2026: $180M is allocated annually through FY2027-28. There are three application windows per fiscal year, each open for about 3 weeks. The minimum credit request is $20,000. The statutory maximum is 20% of the annual pool (about $36M). Application is through calcompetes.ca.gov -- account creation uses a 6-digit emailed key, no password required.
Phase I is a ratio screen. Your ratio = credit requested divided by (5-year projected wages plus investment). A lower ratio is more competitive. GO-Biz publishes historical cutoff ratios -- compare yours before investing 20 hours in the application. If your ratio is above the cutoff, you can still advance to Phase II by certifying that the project would leave California without the credit (CEO/CFO signed declaration), or by certifying that 75%+ of new jobs will be in a high-unemployment or high-poverty area of California.
Phase II involves negotiation on qualitative factors: local unemployment rates, competing incentives from other states, economic multiplier, strategic importance to California, and workforce quality commitments. Committee approval takes about 3 months from application submission.
| If you are... | Better fit | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Doing qualifying R&D in CA, any stage | CA R&D Credit | Formula-based, no competitive screen, stacks with federal |
| Adding 10+ CA full-time jobs with $5M+ investment | CalCompetes | Negotiated credit can be $100K-$10M+; R&D credit handles R&D separately |
| Early-stage, few CA employees, no investment yet | CA R&D Credit first | CalCompetes minimum is $20K -- small teams often don't hit ROI on 45-hour application |
| Headquartering in CA to escape another state's taxes | CalCompetes | The "we'd leave CA without the credit" bypass gets you to Phase II directly |
| Manufacturing expansion, 50+ new jobs | Both, in that order | CalCompetes for job-creation credit; CA R&D for process/product R&D on same facility |
You're in a good position because the federal Section 41 R&D credit's QSB payroll-tax offset was designed exactly for you. Your qualifying R&D wages (engineers building the core product) go on Form 6765; the resulting credit offsets federal payroll taxes up to $500K/yr -- you don't need CA income tax liability to benefit. A team of 8 engineers at $150K average salary generates roughly $1.2M in qualifying wages. With 14% ASC, that's about $140K-$168K in QREs above base, producing $19K-$24K in federal credits annually in year one, growing as the base grows.
Simultaneously file FTB Form 3523 for the California 15% R&D credit. You won't have CA tax liability to absorb it yet, but the carryforward is indefinite. Accumulate it through Series A -- by the time you're profitable, you'll have a meaningful CA credit balance waiting to offset your franchise tax.
For grant capital, apply to NSF SBIR via a Project Pitch (seedfund.nsf.gov). NSF funds SaaS with AI, security, accessibility, or infrastructure angles. The 3,500-character pitch takes 15-20 hours to write well. Phase I is up to $305,000, non-dilutive, no equity, no cost match. This is the highest-dollar non-dilutive funding available to a pre-revenue CA SaaS company.
Source: IRS §41 QSB rules; FTB R&TC §23609; NSF America's Seed Fund program guideYour situation has three stacks available simultaneously. First, any R&D spend on process automation, sensor integration, robotics, or software for manufacturing control qualifies for both the federal Section 41 and CA 15% R&D credits. Manufacturing process improvement that eliminates uncertainty and uses experimentation qualifies -- you don't have to be a tech company. Second, if your Industry 4.0 adoption requires significant CA-based capital investment and new hires, CalCompetes is your path: manufacturers in Riverside, Fresno, Bakersfield, Modesto, and Stockton are often in high-unemployment areas, which gives you a bypass to Phase II regardless of your ratio. Third, if you're adding clean energy equipment (solar, CHP, energy storage) as part of the plant upgrade, the Section 48 ITC gives you 30% back on that spend as a federal tax credit.
The practical sequence: spend 20 hours filing for the R&D credits (immediate return, formula-based). If you're adding 15+ jobs and $2M+ in investment, budget 45 hours for a CalCompetes application in the next open window (check business.ca.gov). If clean energy is in the capex plan, get your electrician's project scope confirmed for prevailing wage compliance before installation starts -- you can't retroactively qualify for the 30% rate if you miss prevailing wage.
Source: IRS §48; FTB Form 3523; GO-Biz CalCompetes FAQ (Feb 2026)You're in one of the strongest funding environments in the country. DOE SBIR (up to $200K Phase I) and the American-Made Program prize challenges ($50K-$3M+ per challenge, plus national lab vouchers) are specifically structured for cleantech founders with novel IP. DOE's SBIR program funds commercialization-adjacent R&D -- you don't have to be purely basic science.
American-Made challenges are staged competitions. Early phases are open to anyone; later phases require prior phase wins but award larger prizes. National lab vouchers are particularly valuable: direct access to Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley, Alameda County), SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory (Menlo Park, Santa Clara County), or NREL resources translates into testing capacity that a 5-person startup couldn't otherwise afford.
Stack DOE funding with the CA R&D credit (15% of CA-located R&D wages and costs) and the Section 48 ITC if you're deploying demonstration-scale hardware. California's aggressive renewable energy mandates from CARB and CPUC also create procurement pathways that aren't available in other states. The California Energy Commission runs its own grant programs that complement federal DOE funding -- the Clean Transportation Program and Electric Program Investment Charge (EPIC) are worth monitoring.
Source: DOE American-Made Program; CARB Clean Transportation Program; CPUC EPIC programYour two best immediate options are the SBA Women's Business Center (WBC) network and, if you have qualifying service-business R&D, the CA R&D credit. California has over a dozen WBC locations including sites in Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, Oakland, Sacramento, and Fresno. WBCs provide free one-on-one counseling, access to SBA Microloan intermediaries (up to $50K, 8-13% interest), and connections to WBENC (Women's Business Enterprise National Council) certification, which opens corporate procurement channels.
For grant capital without a deep-tech angle, private programs are your main path. The Amber Grant awards $10,000 monthly and $25,000 annually, specifically for women founders, with rolling applications at ambergrantsforwomen.com. Tory Burch Foundation Fellows awards $5,000 grants plus a year of business education to women entrepreneurs. IFundWomen and Hello Alice both run multiple grant programs with women-founder tiers -- total award sizes are smaller ($1K-$25K typical) but application effort is proportionally lower.
If your service business has a technology component -- custom software, health tech, data analytics, environmental consulting -- you may qualify for the CA R&D credit even as a service company. The four-part test (technological in nature, aimed at improving a business component, genuine uncertainty, conducted through experimentation) applies by sector, not by whether you call yourself a "tech company."
Source: SBA Women's Business Centers locator; Amber Grant; Tory Burch FoundationCalifornia has two SBA Veterans Business Outreach Centers (VBOCs): one in San Diego and one in Fresno. VBOCs provide free business counseling, VOSB/SDVOSB certification assistance, and connections to federal contracting opportunities through the VA's Vets First program and DoD set-asides. VOSB and SDVOSB certifications give you access to sole-source and set-aside federal contracts above the SBIR threshold -- this is often more valuable than any single grant.
The IVMF Entrepreneurship Bootcamp for Veterans (EBV) is a 9-day intensive training program with about $15,000 in capital support included. Competition is selective -- apply through the IVMF portal (ivmf.syracuse.edu). Warrior Rising provides grant funding and mentorship for veteran entrepreneurs, with award amounts up to $25,000, through a competitive application cycle.
If your veteran-owned company is doing any qualifying R&D, SBIR is the same for veteran-owned businesses as any other small business: 51%+ US ownership (veteran or not) qualifies equally. The DoD SBIR program specifically, given its defense-aligned topics, is a natural fit if your business is in sectors like cybersecurity, aerospace components, advanced materials, or logistics technology. CA veteran-owned businesses in San Diego and Los Angeles are especially competitive for DoD SBIR topics given the regional defense industry concentration.
Source: SBA VBOC locator; IVMF EBV program; Warrior RisingCalifornia's geographic scale -- 163,696 square miles from the Oregon border to San Diego County -- means funding access varies significantly by region. GO-Biz, CalOSBA (California Office of the Small Business Advocate), IBank, and CARB all administer programs with regional eligibility variations or prioritization for high-unemployment areas.
The Bay Area's concentration of deep-tech, biotech, and SaaS companies makes it the most SBIR-competitive geography in the state. NSF SBIR, NIH SBIR (especially through UCSF and Stanford affiliations), and DOE SBIR all have strong awardee representation from Alameda County, Santa Clara County, and San Francisco County. The San Francisco Bay Area Small Business Development Center (SBDC) host institution covers Alameda and Contra Costa counties. The Bay Area SBDC at San Francisco is a primary resource for early-stage founders navigating federal applications.
CalCompetes applications from the Bay Area face stiffer competition because wages are already high (lower-ratio advantage is harder to achieve). If your Bay Area operation is hiring at $150K+ average wages, your ratio may not clear Phase I cutoff without the "absent-award" bypass declaration.
Los Angeles County is California's largest county by both population and business count. The LA SBDC covers the county through multiple service centers including downtown Los Angeles, Long Beach, and the San Fernando Valley. For cleantech and aerospace-adjacent founders in Long Beach, Anaheim, or Riverside, DOE and DoD SBIR are the primary paths. Orange County has a strong biomedical device cluster (aligning with NIH SBIR) and aerospace suppliers (aligning with DoD SBIR).
San Diego County hosts one of the most concentrated biotech ecosystems in the US (Torrey Pines Mesa corridor, Sorrento Valley, La Jolla). NIH SBIR is the primary federal grant path for San Diego biotech founders. UCSD/Skaggs and Scripps Research Institute affiliations are valued by NIH study sections. The San Diego VBOC also serves veteran entrepreneurs across the Southern California region.
The Inland Empire has elevated unemployment relative to coastal California, which creates CalCompetes advantage. Manufacturing and logistics companies in Riverside and San Bernardino counties with 10+ new jobs often qualify for the Phase I ratio bypass (high-unemployment area) regardless of their ratio score. IBank's Small Business Finance Center administers loan guarantees through partner lenders in the Inland Empire for businesses that don't qualify for conventional credit.
The Central Valley has the highest concentration of agricultural and food processing businesses in the state, creating alignment with USDA grant programs (not covered on this page) and CDFA (California Department of Food and Agriculture) programs. Fresno County and Tulare County both qualify as high-poverty areas for CalCompetes Phase I bypass purposes. Sacramento is home to GO-Biz headquarters, the FTB, CDTFA, and CARB -- the administrative proximity makes in-person program consultation more accessible than from remote regions. The Sacramento SBDC serves the greater Sacramento Valley region.
Rural California businesses in the North Coast (Humboldt, Mendocino, Del Norte counties) and Sierra Nevada foothills often qualify for USDA Rural Development programs alongside state programs. The CDFA Specialty Crop Block Grant Program and USDA Rural Energy for America Program (REAP) are particularly relevant for agriculture and agtech founders in these regions. Broadband and infrastructure constraints create additional federal opportunity through USDA's Distance Learning and Telemedicine grants.
| Mechanism | How You Get the Money | When You Get It | Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tax Credit (R&D, ITC) | Reduces your tax bill dollar-for-dollar | At tax filing; payroll offset quarterly | Audit risk on calculations; non-refundable if no tax liability |
| CalCompetes (tax credit) | Negotiated credit applied over 5 years | Annually as you meet milestones | Recapture if you miss a milestone year |
| SBIR Grant | Direct cash award, no repayment | 6-18 months after application | Competitive (12% acceptance for NSF); reporting requirements |
| Prize Challenge (American-Made) | Prize payment after winning a phase | Immediately after phase award | Staged; later phases require prior wins |
| SBA Loan | Loan proceeds -- must be repaid | 60-90 days after application | Debt obligation; personal guarantee often required |
| Agency | Phase I Max | Best CA Sectors | Application Start |
|---|---|---|---|
| NSF | $305,000 | AI, deep tech, hardware, SaaS infrastructure, cross-domain | 3,500-char Project Pitch at seedfund.nsf.gov |
| NIH | $323,090 | Biotech, digital health, medical devices, mental health tech, diagnostics | Specific NIH institute PA; deadlines Sept 5 / Jan 5 / Apr 5 |
| DOE | ~$200,000 | Clean energy, grid, storage, advanced manufacturing, nuclear | Topic-specific solicitations -- check grants.gov and energy.gov/sbir |
| DoD | ~$275,000 | Defense tech, aerospace, cybersecurity, sensors, advanced materials | DSIP portal; topics published annually by service branch |
(Engineers writing code, scientists running experiments, developers testing prototypes -- in CA locations)
YES: File Form 6765 (federal, up to $500K payroll offset for QSBs) AND FTB Form 3523 (CA, 15% incremental, indefinite carryforward). Do this first, before anything else. Time investment: 20-30 hours with a tax advisor. Annual ROI: $20K-$500K+.
NO (or not sure): Move to Step 2.
YES, 10+ jobs and $500K+ investment: Check CalCompetes application windows at business.ca.gov. Calculate your ratio (credit requested / wages + investment). If you're in a high-unemployment CA county (Central Valley, Inland Empire rural) or would leave CA without the credit, you have a Phase I bypass.
NO: Move to Step 3.
Deep tech / AI / hardware / cross-domain:
Biotech / digital health / medical devices:
Clean energy / grid / storage / advanced manufacturing:
Defense / aerospace / cybersecurity:
Under $50K needed:
$50K-$5M needed for business purposes:
Woman-owned:
Veteran-owned:
GrantCompass matches your business profile against 30+ California programs and flags the ones worth your time -- with honest estimates of award amounts, application hours, and approval rates.
Get Your Matches (Free)California small businesses can access 30+ funding programs in 2026. Key programs include: the California R&D Tax Credit (15% of incremental CA R&D spend, no annual cap, indefinite carryforward); CalCompetes Tax Credit ($180M/year for job creation, negotiated with GO-Biz, $20K minimum); SBIR grants from NSF ($305K Phase I), NIH ($323K Phase I), and DOE; DOE American-Made Program prize competitions ($50K-$3M+ per challenge); and SBA Microloans (up to $50K through CA intermediaries). Most require no cost-matching.
Yes. California offers a 15% R&D tax credit administered by the Franchise Tax Board (FTB). There is no annual dollar cap on the credit amount, and unused credits carry forward indefinitely -- there is no expiration date. You claim it on FTB Form 3523, filed with your California income tax return. It stacks directly with the federal Section 41 R&D credit on the same California-located research spend. Any entity type qualifies: C-corps, S-corps, LLCs, partnerships, and sole proprietors.
CalCompetes is California's flagship job-creation incentive, administered by GO-Biz (Governor's Office of Business and Economic Development). Businesses negotiate a custom income tax credit in exchange for a 5-year performance agreement to create or retain full-time W-2 jobs in California. $180M is allocated annually through FY2027-28. The minimum credit request is $20,000. Three application windows open per fiscal year, each for about 3 weeks. Miss a milestone year and GO-Biz recoups that tranche -- over-committing is the most common applicant mistake.
Yes. DOE's American-Made Program runs prize competitions year-round for clean energy innovators -- awards range $50K to $3M+ per challenge, plus national lab vouchers worth $25K-$100K. The DOE SBIR program (Phase I up to $200K) funds early-stage cleantech R&D. The Section 48 Investment Tax Credit covers 30% of qualifying solar, storage, geothermal, fuel cell, and CHP installations. California founders also benefit from state-level CARB and CPUC incentive programs that layer on top of federal credits.
Women-owned CA businesses can access SBA Women's Business Centers (12+ California locations) providing free counseling and Microloan connections. Private grant programs include: Amber Grant ($10K monthly + $25K annual, rolling applications); Tory Burch Foundation Fellows ($5K + year of education); IFundWomen and Hello Alice (multiple programs, $1K-$25K typical). CalCompetes and the CA R&D credit have no gender-ownership requirements -- women-owned companies compete on equal terms for those programs.
California veteran-owned businesses can access: SBA Veterans Business Outreach Centers (VBOCs) in San Diego and Fresno for free counseling and VOSB/SDVOSB certification; IVMF Entrepreneurship Bootcamp for Veterans (EBV) with about $15K in capital support; and Warrior Rising grants up to $25,000. SBA's Boots to Business program teaches entrepreneurship basics. All federal SBIR programs are open to veteran-owned businesses on equal terms.
Start with the highest-ROI programs first. Step 1: If you have qualifying R&D wages, file FTB Form 3523 (CA credit) and Form 6765 (federal credit) with your next returns. Step 2: If adding CA jobs and investment, check CalCompetes windows at business.ca.gov. Step 3: For non-dilutive grant capital, match your sector to the right SBIR agency (NSF for deep tech, NIH for biotech, DOE for clean energy). Step 4: Contact a California SBDC for free one-on-one advising -- 60+ service locations statewide.