North Carolina eliminated its state R&D tax credit in 2016. This page explains what replaced it, how NC's five major business regions stack up for funding, and which federal programs -- Section 41 R&D, SBIR from NIH and NSF, Section 48 solar ITC, and Section 45X manufacturing credits -- are most relevant for NC founders in Raleigh, Durham, Charlotte, Greensboro, Asheville, Wilmington, and Eastern NC.
North Carolina has no active state R&D tax credit (repealed effective 2016). NC's funding landscape is now federal-credit-heavy and private-foundation-supported. The four paths worth your time: (1) Federal Section 41 R&D credit -- up to $500,000/yr in payroll-tax offsets for pre-revenue tech and biotech companies; (2) NIH or NSF SBIR grants ($305K-$323K) for companies doing qualifying R&D in Research Triangle Park or elsewhere in NC; (3) NC IDEA SEED grants ($50K) and NC Biotech Center programs for NC-based startups; (4) Golden LEAF Foundation grants ($75K-$5M+) for businesses in tobacco-impacted Eastern NC counties. NC's corporate income tax is also being phased to 0% by 2030, which is significant context for any companies still holding pre-2016 state R&D credit carryforwards.
North Carolina made a deliberate policy choice. In 2013, the General Assembly passed sweeping tax reform (House Bill 998, Session Law 2013-316) that eliminated most targeted business tax credits -- including the Article 3B Research and Development Tax Credits -- in favor of lower overall corporate income tax rates. The plan worked: NC's corporate income tax has dropped steadily since 2013 and is scheduled to reach 0% for tax years beginning January 1, 2030.
This creates a double bind for companies with pre-2016 credit carryforwards. Those credits had a 15-year carryforward window, meaning the latest vintage (tax year 2015) could theoretically be used through 2030. But NC's corporate income tax rate is also racing toward zero -- meaning the carryforwards may expire with nothing left to offset. If your company has old NC R&D credit balances on its books, consult a North Carolina tax advisor before assuming they'll deliver value.
For NC companies doing qualifying research, the federal Section 41 credit provides what the state used to: a meaningful incentive on R&D wages and expenses. The credit equals 20% of qualified R&D spend above your historical base (or 14% via the simpler Alternative Simplified Credit). For early-stage companies, the more valuable mechanism is the Qualified Small Business payroll-tax offset: if you have under $5M in gross receipts and are within 5 years of your first revenue, you can apply up to $500,000/year directly against your employer payroll taxes. That is real cash against Form 941 obligations, before you owe any income tax.
NC does not provide a state match on this. California, Massachusetts, and New York all stack their own state R&D credits on top of the federal credit. NC companies only get the federal credit. That said, the federal credit alone is worth pursuing: an NC tech startup with $2M in qualifying R&D wages can generate $280,000 to $400,000 in federal payroll-tax offsets per year under the QSB route.
Here is the step-by-step process for an NC tech or biotech company using the QSB payroll-tax offset route in 2026:
Step 1: Confirm you qualify as a QSB. You need less than $5M in gross receipts in the credit year, AND no gross receipts in any year more than 5 years before the credit year. A company that first generated revenue in 2022 qualifies through 2027 (5-year window). "Gross receipts" includes all revenue -- even non-recurring amounts -- so track this carefully.
Step 2: Document your qualifying research activities contemporaneously. Each project must pass the four-part test: (a) technological in nature -- the research relies on engineering, physical science, computer science, or biological science; (b) permitted purpose -- developing or improving a business component's functionality, quality, reliability, or performance; (c) process of experimentation -- you're testing hypotheses via simulation, modeling, trial-and-error, or formal scientific methods; (d) genuine uncertainty -- there's real technical uncertainty about whether your approach will work. Software development qualifies if it satisfies these tests. Administrative, management, and market research activities do not.
Step 3: Calculate your Qualified Research Expenses (QREs). QREs include: wages for employees directly performing, directly supervising, or directly supporting qualifying research; supplies physically consumed in research; 65% of payments to US-based contract researchers. Cloud computing costs for research workloads have qualified since 2016 IRS guidance. Exclude: wages for non-research management and administrative roles; any research funded by a third party (SBIR grants, client contracts, government awards -- these are explicitly excluded from the QRE calculation).
Step 4: Choose your credit calculation method. The Alternative Simplified Credit (ASC) at 14% is almost always the right choice for NC startups -- it avoids the impossible task of reconstructing 1984-1988 base-year data and only requires 3 years of prior QRE history (or uses 6% for companies with no prior R&D history).
Step 5: File Form 6765 and elect the payroll-tax offset. The election must be made on your original tax return by the due date (including extensions). You cannot make the election on an amended return -- miss this deadline and you lose the current year's offset. The elected amount flows to Form 8974, which then offsets payroll taxes starting with the first quarter after you file your return.
Step 6: Keep audit-ready records for 4+ years. The IRS Section 41 audit risk is real -- roughly 5-10% of R&D credit filers receive information requests. The most common audit triggers: (a) large credits relative to gross revenue; (b) credits claimed in industries the IRS views as lower-R&D (retail, food service); (c) post-facto documentation assembled after the fact rather than contemporaneous records. NC companies near Research Triangle Park have an advantage: university partnerships, formal lab notebooks, and patent applications all serve as compelling contemporaneous documentation.
TCJA Section 174 interaction (important for 2022+ tax years): Since 2022, domestic R&D costs must be amortized over 5 years rather than deducted immediately under Section 174. This doesn't eliminate the Section 41 credit but does require more careful tax modeling -- you get the credit immediately but lose the immediate deduction. Work with a CPA familiar with both sections to optimize your NC company's position.
Source: IRS Form 6765 instructions; IRC §41; IRS.gov Research Credit guidance; NC Department of Revenue (NCDOR) corporate tax history| State | State R&D Credit | Strategy for NC Companies |
|---|---|---|
| North Carolina | Repealed (effective 2016) | Federal §41 only; stack SBIR + NC IDEA |
| Virginia | 10% of excess QREs, capped | VA companies have marginal state advantage |
| Georgia | 10% credit, transferable | GA companies can monetize via transfer market |
| South Carolina | 5% on eligible expenses | SC companies get modest state boost |
NIH SBIR Phase I funds early-stage biomedical and health-technology R&D at up to $323,090 per award (6 months, non-dilutive). North Carolina is among the top-10 states for NIH SBIR awards precisely because of Research Triangle Park -- the highest concentration of biotech and pharmaceutical R&D employment in the Southeast. Companies in Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill, and Morrisville with founders from Duke, UNC, or NC State routinely compete for NIH SBIR awards from NCI (cancer diagnostics), NIMH (mental health tech), NIBIB (devices and imaging), and NIDDK (metabolic diseases).
The NIH SBIR process is peer-reviewed: your application goes through formal study section scoring, and you need a score in roughly the top 15th percentile to be funded. System-wide success rates are 15-20%. The single highest-leverage step is emailing the Program Officer at your target NIH institute before submitting -- POs are explicitly accessible and can save you 150 hours on a misaligned application.
NIH SBIR is currently between intakes following the April 2026 reauthorization. The next standard receipt date is September 5, 2026. A new solicitation (PHS 2026-x) is expected to open several weeks before that date.
| Program | Award Max | Best Fit for NC |
|---|---|---|
| NIH SBIR Phase I | $323,090 | RTP biotech, digital health, medtech, pharma |
| NSF SBIR Phase I | $305,000 | Deep tech, hardware, software, environmental |
| DOE SBIR Phase I | ~$200,000 | Clean energy, advanced manufacturing, grid tech |
NSF's America's Seed Fund backs deep-tech founders at up to $305,000 in Phase I -- zero equity, zero cost-sharing. A mandatory 3,500-character Project Pitch screens applicants before a full proposal is invited. NSF acceptance is roughly 12%. Unlike NIH, which requires a specific biomedical focus, NSF SBIR funds almost any hard-science or engineering domain: robotics, materials science, agricultural technology, semiconductor devices, quantum sensing, environmental monitoring, and advanced software. NC State University's strengths in engineering and agricultural sciences make the NCSU-to-NSF-SBIR pipeline particularly active.
NSF SBIR is also between intakes as of May 2026 (Project Pitch submissions paused since April 16, 2026). NSF expects to resume in coming weeks. Prior cycles ran in September, November, March, and July.
North Carolina is a top-5 US state for installed solar capacity -- a fact that makes the Section 48 ITC unusually relevant for NC agricultural businesses, manufacturers, commercial real estate owners, and hospitality operators. The credit equals 30% of the cost of qualifying clean energy systems placed in service: solar photovoltaic arrays, battery storage systems (at least 5 kWh), geothermal equipment, fuel cells, and combined heat-and-power systems.
The 30% rate requires either prevailing wage and apprenticeship compliance for all construction workers throughout the project and for 5 years after commissioning, or project output below 1 MW (the threshold most NC farm and small commercial installations fall under). Projects that don't meet prevailing wage rules and exceed 1 MW receive only the 6% base rate -- a 5x reduction.
North Carolina municipalities, rural electric cooperatives, and nonprofits can now receive the credit as direct cash payment through the IRA's elective pay mechanism (Section 6417) -- no tax liability required. For-profit businesses can sell (transfer) their Section 48 credits to a third-party buyer if their own tax liability is insufficient to use the full credit.
| Credit | Rate / Amount | NC Application |
|---|---|---|
| Section 48 ITC | 30% of install cost | Solar farms, battery storage, commercial rooftop, ag |
| Section 45X Manufacturing PTC | $0.07/W (solar modules) | NC solar panel manufacturers (growing sector) |
| USDA REAP | Up to 50% grant | Rural NC agricultural and small business solar |
Section 45X provides per-unit production tax credits for US manufacturers of qualifying clean energy components: solar modules ($0.07/W), solar cells ($0.04/W), battery cells ($35/kWh), wind blades, nacelles, and towers, inverters, and critical minerals. North Carolina's manufacturing base -- historically in textiles, furniture, and chemicals -- is increasingly pivoting toward clean energy component manufacturing. Companies in the Charlotte region, Greensboro, and the eastern Coastal Plain making qualifying components can claim these credits regardless of prevailing wage compliance (unlike Section 48).
Section 45X has no minimum production threshold, but practically only manufacturers at the megawatt or gigawatt-hour scale generate material credit value. For NC manufacturers evaluating a pivot from legacy textiles or furniture to solar or battery component production, Section 45X is worth modeling before committing to capital expenditures.
The SBA 7(a) program is the federal government's primary small business loan guarantee, backing up to $5M per borrower for working capital, equipment, real estate, acquisitions, and debt refinancing. Banks and credit unions originate and service the loans; the SBA guarantees 75-85% of principal, allowing lenders to extend credit that conventional underwriting would decline. SBA Preferred Lender Program (PLP) banks -- which include major Charlotte-area lenders -- can approve loans without SBA review, shortening timelines to 2-4 weeks.
Charlotte is one of the nation's major banking centers (Bank of America, Truist Financial, Wells Fargo all have significant Charlotte operations), which means NC small businesses -- particularly in Mecklenburg County and the Charlotte Region -- have access to experienced SBA lenders with high volume and fast processing. NC SBTDC (Small Business and Technology Development Center) offices in Raleigh, Charlotte, Greensboro, and Wilmington can match businesses with appropriate SBA lenders at no cost.
NC IDEA is a Raleigh-based nonprofit that awards non-dilutive grants to early-stage technology startups headquartered and operating in North Carolina. It runs three grant tiers: MICRO ($10,000 for the earliest-concept stage), SEED ($50,000 for startups with demonstrated market traction), and BUILD ($100,000 for revenue-generating companies scaling beyond SEED). NC IDEA is not a government agency -- it is a privately funded nonprofit. Its grants do not require repayment and do not take equity.
To qualify for the SEED grant: you must be NC-based and operating for at least one year, with demonstrated evidence of market validation (paying customers, signed LOIs, or equivalent). NC IDEA prioritizes scalable technology products and services over professional services firms. Startups in Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill, Greensboro, Charlotte, Wilmington, and Asheville have all received NC IDEA funding. Applications open at ncidea.org in competitive cohort cycles.
NC IDEA is competitive. Here is what gives applicants an edge:
Traction over vision. NC IDEA evaluates teams on proof, not potential. "We have 3 paying customers and $18K in revenue" beats "we believe our market is $2B." The SEED grant specifically rewards demonstrated market validation, not ideation stage companies.
NC economic impact matters. NC IDEA's mission is economic development in North Carolina. Applications that show how the company intends to hire NC residents, build NC-based operations, and create economic value in the state -- rather than plans to relocate to San Francisco after a Series A -- score more favorably.
Apply to MICRO first if pre-revenue. NC IDEA's MICRO grant ($10K) has a lower traction bar. Winning MICRO and demonstrating progress is a strong signal in a subsequent SEED application. Many SEED winners were MICRO alumni.
Engage NC IDEA's ecosystem before applying. NC IDEA hosts regular events, webinars, and office hours in Raleigh. Program officers can give informal feedback on application fit before you submit. This is the single highest-ROI step for most applicants.
Understand what NC IDEA does not fund. NC IDEA does not fund: professional services firms without a technology product; companies headquartered outside North Carolina; businesses in retail, food service, or real estate development (unless there is a genuine technology component); companies primarily funded by out-of-state investors without NC operational commitments.
Source: ncidea.org program descriptions and application guidelinesThe Golden LEAF Foundation was created in 1999 from North Carolina's share of the 1998 Master Settlement Agreement with tobacco manufacturers. Its sole mission is economic development in tobacco-dependent and economically distressed NC counties -- primarily in Eastern NC and the Sandhills, where tobacco farming historically dominated and the decline of the tobacco industry left significant economic displacement.
Golden LEAF awards range from $75,000 to $5M or more, depending on the program and community impact. The Foundation funds job creation, infrastructure, workforce training, business development, and agricultural diversification. This is not a startup grant or an R&D grant -- it is a community economic development tool with a geographic and mission focus. Businesses in Pitt County (Greenville), Wayne County (Goldsboro), Edgecombe County (Rocky Mount), Nash County (Nashville/Wilson), Johnston County (Smithfield), Sampson County (Clinton), and similar Eastern NC counties are the primary recipients.
| Factor | Detail |
|---|---|
| Award range | $75,000 to $5M+ (project-dependent) |
| Geographic focus | Tobacco-impacted NC counties (primarily Eastern NC / Coastal Plain) |
| Eligible uses | Job creation, infrastructure, workforce training, ag diversification |
| Not eligible for | General R&D, product development, non-NC operations, retail startups |
| Application | goldenleaf.org -- letter of inquiry, then invited application |
The North Carolina Biotechnology Center (NC Biotech Center), based in Research Triangle Park in Durham, is a state-affiliated private nonprofit that supports the NC life sciences and biotech sector through grants, loans, and business development programs. NC Biotech Center grant programs target early-stage biotech, pharmaceutical, medical device, and agricultural biotech companies with NC operations.
Key programs include SBIR/STTR matching grants (NC Biotech Center provides matching funds to companies that win federal SBIR or STTR awards, extending non-dilutive capital); business development loans for NC life sciences companies at below-market rates; and specialized grant programs for NC academic spinout companies. Raleigh, Durham, and Chapel Hill (the Research Triangle) are the primary geography, but NC Biotech Center programs are available statewide to NC-based companies in qualifying sectors.
You are in the strongest position of any NC business type for non-dilutive funding. Research Triangle Park -- anchored by Duke University, UNC Chapel Hill, and NC State University -- is the most concentrated research university cluster in the Southeast. Federal SBIR awards flow disproportionately to RTP-area companies because the research infrastructure (labs, core facilities, established PI relationships, clinical trial networks) is already in place.
Your priority stack: (1) Federal Section 41 R&D credit -- claim the QSB payroll-tax offset immediately if you have qualifying R&D wages and are within 5 years of first revenue. (2) NIH SBIR Phase I ($323,090) if you're in biotech, digital health, medtech, or pharmaceutical -- email the relevant program officer at Duke, UNC, or your affiliated institute before the September 2026 receipt date. (3) NSF SBIR Phase I ($305,000) if you're in deep tech, engineering, or non-biomedical science. (4) NC IDEA SEED ($50,000) once you have demonstrated market traction. (5) NC Biotech Center SBIR matching grant once you win a federal SBIR award. This stack -- §41 + SBIR + NC IDEA + NC Biotech matching -- can deliver $750,000 to $1M+ in non-dilutive capital over a 2-3 year period for a well-positioned RTP startup.
The Economic Development Partnership of NC (EDPNC) and NC Innovation office both maintain resources for Research Triangle Park startups and can connect you with regional advisors, the NC SBTDC, and state economic development incentives for growing companies.
You are operating in a manufacturing corridor with a long legacy in textiles (High Point, Burlington, Asheboro), furniture (High Point -- the "Furniture Capital of the World"), and financial services (Charlotte and Mecklenburg County). Federal funding for manufacturers has improved materially since the Inflation Reduction Act: Section 45X now provides per-unit production credits for clean energy component manufacturers, and Section 48 provides 30% credits on energy installations at manufacturing facilities.
For traditional manufacturers doing process R&D or quality improvement engineering, the federal Section 41 R&D credit applies to qualifying wages -- including engineers, quality technicians, and process designers actively developing new manufacturing processes or improving existing ones. The key test is whether there was genuine technical uncertainty and a process of experimentation. Many NC manufacturers conduct qualifying R&D without realizing it.
NIST's Manufacturing Extension Partnership is delivered in North Carolina through NC State University's Industry Expansion Solutions (IES) program, with offices serving Guilford County (Greensboro), Mecklenburg County (Charlotte), Forsyth County (Winston-Salem), and Cabarrus County (Concord). IES provides hands-on technical assistance for lean manufacturing, energy efficiency, quality systems, and technology adoption. This is not grant money but can significantly improve your readiness to qualify for and deploy federal incentives. SBA 7(a) loans through Charlotte-area preferred lenders are the fastest path to equipment and expansion capital for established Piedmont Triad manufacturers.
North Carolina's agricultural sector is one of the most diverse in the Southeast. NC is the leading US producer of sweet potatoes, the second-largest hog producer (concentrated in Duplin, Sampson, and Wayne counties), and a significant producer of tobacco (though acreage has declined dramatically since the 1990s), Christmas trees (Western NC mountain counties like Ashe and Avery), and blueberries. Each commodity type has distinct federal and state funding paths.
For Eastern NC tobacco-transition operations, the Golden LEAF Foundation is the primary NC-specific resource -- grants from $75K to $5M+ for businesses creating jobs in tobacco-impacted counties. USDA's Value-Added Producer Grant (VAPG) funds product development and market expansion for agricultural producers adding value to their raw commodities -- relevant for sweet potato processors, hog operations adding processing capacity, and specialty crop diversification projects. USDA's Rural Energy for America Program (REAP) provides grants up to 50% of cost for renewable energy installations on farms and rural small businesses in New Hanover County, Buncombe County, Cumberland County, and any USDA-defined rural area.
Section 48 ITC (30%) stacks on top of REAP for solar installations, though the REAP grant reduces the basis for the Section 48 credit. NC agricultural businesses installing solar in counties like Wilson, Sampson, Duplin, Onslow, or Johnston should model both incentives before committing to a contractor. NC's Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (NCDA&CS) maintains a resource directory for NC farm businesses including federal program contacts.
North Carolina's tourism economy is anchored by three distinct geographic draws: Asheville and the Western NC mountain region (Buncombe County, Jackson County, Haywood County) for outdoor recreation and cultural tourism; the Outer Banks (Dare County, Currituck County) for coastal beach tourism; and Wilmington and the Cape Fear Coast (New Hanover County) for a combination of coastal tourism, historic sites, and film production industry.
Tourism and hospitality businesses are generally not eligible for the research-focused federal programs (Section 41, SBIR) unless they're developing genuine technology products. The programs that apply: SBA 7(a) loans for working capital, renovation, and expansion (excellent option for Asheville boutique hotels, Outer Banks vacation rental operations, and Wilmington restaurant groups); Section 48 ITC for solar installations on hotels, resorts, or commercial hospitality properties; USDA REAP for rural hospitality businesses in qualifying rural areas; and SBA Microloans ($50,000 and under) through NC-based community development financial institutions (CDFIs) for smaller tourism businesses.
Asheville is a particularly active market for small business lending through the NC SBTDC's Western Region office at Western Carolina University in Cullowhee, which serves Buncombe, Henderson, Haywood, and surrounding mountain counties. Wilmington businesses are served by the SBTDC's Southeastern Region at UNC Wilmington (UNCW).
North Carolina has one of the highest active-duty and veteran populations in the United States. Fort Liberty (formerly Fort Bragg) in Cumberland County near Fayetteville is one of the largest military installations in the world -- home to the 82nd Airborne Division and Special Operations Command. Camp Lejeune in Jacksonville (Onslow County) is the primary Marine Corps base on the East Coast. Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point in Craven County and Fort Bragg's satellite installations at Hoke and Harnett counties extend the military footprint throughout central and Eastern NC.
Veteran-owned businesses in NC have several dedicated resources: the SBA Veterans Business Outreach Center at NC A&T State University in Greensboro serves veteran entrepreneurs statewide with free business counseling, referrals, and transition resources. SBA Boots to Business provides free entrepreneurship education on-base and online for transitioning service members and veterans. The IVMF Entrepreneurship Bootcamp for Veterans (EBV), run by Syracuse University's Institute for Veterans and Military Families, is a competitive 9-day residential program providing up to $15,000 in capital support for veteran entrepreneurs -- NC applicants from Fort Liberty and Camp Lejeune communities have historically been competitive candidates.
All federal grant and loan programs -- including SBIR, Section 41, SBA 7(a), and Section 48 ITC -- are fully available to veteran-owned businesses on equal competitive terms. There is no veteran-specific preference in these federal programs. The NC Military Business Center at Fayetteville Technical Community College assists veteran-owned businesses specifically in federal contracting, a separate but related pathway to federal revenue.
The Research Triangle is NC's innovation hub -- a cluster of research universities (Duke University in Durham, UNC Chapel Hill, NC State University in Raleigh) and private research institutions that has generated hundreds of biotech and tech spinout companies. Research Triangle Park (RTP), located in Wake and Durham counties between Raleigh and Durham, is one of the largest research park complexes in the world by employment. Key funding organizations serving the Triangle: NC Innovation (EDPNC's innovation arm) in Raleigh; NC IDEA in Raleigh; NC Biotechnology Center in Durham/RTP; NC SBTDC's Northeast Region at NC State; and the Research Triangle Regional Partnership.
For Cary, Apex, and Morrisville startups (the western Wake County suburbs of Raleigh), the same federal programs apply as for Raleigh/Durham -- many RTP-adjacent companies stage operations in Cary or Morrisville before moving into Durham. The city of Raleigh and Wake County Economic Development both maintain small business resource directories that include grant program information.
The Piedmont Triad is NC's traditional manufacturing and commercial hub. Greensboro (Guilford County) is home to NC A&T State University -- the largest HBCU in the United States, which houses the SBA Veterans Business Outreach Center and has active SBIR participation. Winston-Salem (Forsyth County) anchors a healthcare and advanced manufacturing corridor, with Wake Forest University School of Medicine and the medical district driving biomedical activity. High Point (Guilford and Randolph counties) remains the global furniture industry capital and is increasingly pivoting toward advanced materials and design technology.
Key organizations: EDPNC's Triad office; NC SBTDC's Triad Region at UNC Greensboro; Triad Business Journal's small business resource network; Greensboro Chamber of Commerce's small business division. NC's One NC Small Business Program (administered through the NC Department of Commerce) has historically provided state-level incentive funding for companies creating jobs in Guilford, Forsyth, and Rockingham counties.
Charlotte is NC's largest city and the nation's second-largest banking center (Bank of America and Truist both headquartered here). Mecklenburg County's financial services cluster drives significant fintech and enterprise software development activity, which qualifies for the federal Section 41 R&D credit. Cabarrus County (Concord) and Union County (Monroe) are growing manufacturing and logistics suburbs of Charlotte. Key organizations: Charlotte Regional Business Alliance; NC SBTDC's South Region at UNC Charlotte; Charlotte Area SBA District Office; SCORE Charlotte chapter.
SBA 7(a) loan volume in Charlotte is among the highest in NC -- established banks like Truist, Wells Fargo Charlotte operations, and regional lenders including Bank OZK and Live Oak Bank (Wilmington-based) are all active SBA preferred lenders serving the Charlotte region. Live Oak Bank, headquartered in Wilmington (New Hanover County), has become one of the nation's leading SBA lenders by volume and serves Charlotte-area businesses remotely.
Eastern NC's economy is shaped by three forces: military installations (Fort Liberty in Cumberland County, Camp Lejeune in Onslow County, Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point in Craven County, Seymour Johnson Air Force Base in Wayne County/Goldsboro), agriculture (tobacco, hogs, sweet potatoes, cotton, and soybeans in Sampson, Duplin, Johnston, Wayne, and Nash counties), and healthcare (Vidant Health / ECU Health in Greenville/Pitt County).
Golden LEAF Foundation is the most significant private grant source for Eastern NC counties. Businesses in Pitt County, Wayne County, Edgecombe County, Wilson County, Nash County, Harnett County, and Johnston County are the primary Golden LEAF targets. East Carolina University (Greenville, Pitt County) has an active SBIR program through its medical school (ECU Health/Brody School of Medicine). NC SBTDC's Eastern Region at ECU serves Eastern NC counties. The NC Rural Economic Development Center also maintains programs for rural Eastern NC businesses.
Western NC's mountain region is dominated by Asheville (Buncombe County) as the regional hub, with significant tourism and outdoor recreation economies extending through Henderson County (Hendersonville), Haywood County (Waynesville), and Watauga County (Boone, home to Appalachian State University). The region has a growing outdoor technology and adventure sports product manufacturing cluster. Ashe County and Avery County are the leading Christmas tree production counties in the US.
NC SBTDC's Western Region at Western Carolina University in Cullowhee (Jackson County) serves the mountain region. The Mountain BizWorks CDFI (community development financial institution) in Asheville provides small business loans and technical assistance specifically for Western NC businesses. Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC) grants are available to businesses in Appalachian NC counties including Alleghany, Ashe, Avery, Caldwell, Mitchell, Surry, Watauga, Wilkes, and Yadkin counties.
| Program A | Program B | Stackable? |
|---|---|---|
| Federal §41 R&D Credit | SBIR (NIH or NSF) | Yes -- on separate research activities |
| Federal §41 R&D Credit | NC IDEA SEED | Yes -- fully compatible |
| SBIR Phase I (NIH) | NC Biotech Center matching | Yes -- NC Biotech matching requires federal award first |
| Section 48 ITC (30%) | USDA REAP (up to 50%) | Yes -- but REAP reduces §48 basis dollar-for-dollar |
| Golden LEAF | Federal §41 / SBIR | Yes -- different programs, no conflict |
| SBA 7(a) Loan | Any grant program | Yes -- loans and grants can coexist |
| Credit | How It Applies | Annual Value (Estimate) |
|---|---|---|
| Section 41 R&D | Process R&D wages, materials R&D | $50K-$300K depending on QRE volume |
| Section 48 ITC | Solar/storage on plant property | 30% of install cost (one-time) |
| Section 45X Manufacturing PTC | If making qualifying clean energy components | Per-unit ($0.07/W solar, $35/kWh battery) |
| Program | Amount | County Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Golden LEAF Foundation | $75K-$5M+ | Tobacco-impacted NC counties (Eastern NC) |
| USDA REAP | Up to 50% of solar/RE install | Rural NC counties (USDA-defined rural) |
| USDA VAPG | Up to $75K (planning) or $250K (working capital) | Statewide -- NC ag producers adding value |
| Section 48 ITC | 30% of install cost | Statewide -- farms, rural commercial property |
| Organization | What It Provides | Location Served |
|---|---|---|
| SBA VBOC at NC A&T | Free counseling, referrals, training | Statewide (Greensboro hub) |
| IVMF EBV Program | Up to $15K capital + 9-day training | Competitive (national) |
| SBA Boots to Business | Free entrepreneurship training | Fort Liberty, Camp Lejeune, statewide |
| NC Military Business Center | Federal contracting assistance | Fayetteville (Cumberland County) |
GrantCompass matches your NC business profile with federal credits, SBIR opportunities, foundation grants, and state programs in 60 seconds -- no spreadsheets, no government websites, no guesswork.
Find My NC GrantsNC repealed its R&D credit for all tax years beginning January 1, 2016. Pre-2016 carryforwards (15-year window) expire by approximately 2030 -- but NC's corporate income tax is simultaneously being phased to 0% (reaching zero for tax years beginning January 1, 2030), meaning those carryforwards may expire with nothing to offset. The federal Section 41 credit is the substitute. There is no active state R&D credit to claim in North Carolina today.
House Bill 998, enacted as Session Law 2013-316, was a sweeping overhaul of North Carolina's tax code. The General Assembly eliminated most targeted business incentive credits -- including Article 3B Research and Development Tax Credits (G.S. 105-129.50 through 105-129.55) -- and replaced them with lower flat rates across corporate income, personal income, and sales taxes. The policy logic was that lower rates benefiting all businesses are more economically efficient than targeted credits benefiting specific activities.
The NC R&D credit repeal was effective for tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2016. Credits earned in tax years 2015 and earlier had a 15-year carryforward period -- meaning 2015 vintage credits could theoretically be applied through 2030. But that assumes there is NC corporate income tax to offset. NC's corporate income tax has been steadily reduced under SB 105 (2021) and subsequent legislation: 2.5% in 2021, 2.25% in 2022, 2.0% in 2023, 0% beginning January 1, 2030. The credits and the offsettable tax are racing toward the same zero-point.
This applies only to a small number of NC companies: those that conducted qualified research in NC before 2016, generated R&D tax credit carryforward balances on their NC corporate returns, and still have unexpired balances from those pre-2016 tax years.
How to check: Pull your NC corporate income tax returns for tax years 2015 and earlier. Look for Article 3B credit carryforward schedules. If balances exist, calculate: the oldest vintage (say, a 2010 credit) expires in 2025 (15-year window) -- that window is closed. A 2014 vintage expires in 2029. A 2015 vintage expires in 2030.
The diminishing NC corporate income tax problem: NC's corporate income tax rate is currently 2.0% (2023) and drops to 0% for tax years beginning January 1, 2030. If you have a $100,000 pre-2016 carryforward and NC's tax on your NC taxable income in 2026 is only $20,000, the credit can only offset $20,000 of actual tax -- the rest carries forward to 2027, where the rate is lower still. By 2030, there is no NC corporate income tax to offset.
What to do: If your company has material pre-2016 NC R&D credit carryforward balances, work with a North Carolina CPA (specifically one familiar with NC corporate tax, not just federal) to: (a) confirm the carryforward balance and vintage years; (b) calculate whether the credits will be absorbed before NC's corporate income tax reaches zero; and (c) model whether any accelerated NC taxable income strategies (e.g., timing of asset dispositions or NC-source income recognition) could use the credits before they expire worthlessly.
For most NC companies, this exercise will confirm that the pre-2016 carryforwards have limited remaining value and the real opportunity is in the federal Section 41 credit going forward.
Source: NC Session Law 2013-316 (HB 998); G.S. 105-129.50 through 105-129.55 (repealed); NC SB 105 (2021) corporate rate phase-down schedule; NCDOR corporate income and franchise tax guidanceRTP gives you access to world-class scientific infrastructure, an established network of program officers who know NC institutions, and proximity to potential research subcontractors at Duke, UNC, and NC State. The SBIR "two-thirds rule" requires that the majority of Phase I work be performed by the small business -- but up to one-third can be subcontracted to university labs. RTP founders who have credible scientific advisors from major NC research universities are structurally more competitive than most other applicants.
Why NC is competitive for NIH SBIR. NIH study sections score applications based on Significance, Investigator, Innovation, Approach, and Environment. "Environment" specifically evaluates access to resources -- labs, instrumentation, data, collaborators. An RTP company with a Duke co-investigator, access to UNC's clinical network, and NC State's engineering facilities scores higher on Environment than an equivalent company in a less research-dense region. This is a structural advantage.
Choosing the right NIH institute. NIH has 27 institutes and centers, each with distinct topic focus and funding rates. Before submitting, identify which 1-2 institutes align with your science:
The Program Officer outreach strategy. Call or email the Program Officer at your target institute's SBIR/STTR program before investing in the full application. A typical PO conversation: "We're developing X for Y indication. Our PI has background in Z. Is this the right fit for your institute's SBIR priorities?" POs will tell you if your science belongs elsewhere, saving you 150+ hours on a misaligned submission.
Resubmission strategy. NIH SBIR allows one resubmission (A1). Historical data shows A1 resubmissions have higher success rates than new submissions for the same science. Plan for a 2-cycle strategy: submit a strong first application, use the summary statement feedback to strengthen the science and address reviewer concerns, then resubmit. Total timeline from first submission to Phase I funding: 12-18 months.
SBIR and Section 41 interaction -- the critical split. If your company uses SBIR Phase I funds for specific research activities, those activities are "funded by another party" for Section 41 purposes and cannot be included in your QRE calculation. Maintain clear project separation: document which experiments are SBIR-funded (excluded from §41) and which are internally funded (eligible for §41). NC State and Duke technology transfer offices can advise on this documentation structure.
Source: NIH SBIR/STTR program information at seed.nih.gov; PA-24-245 (PHS 2024-2); NIH RePORTER database for NC award data; IRC §41 research funding exclusionGolden LEAF funds economic development in NC's tobacco-impacted and economically distressed counties -- primarily Eastern NC. Awards range from $75,000 to $5M+. You need to be creating jobs or community economic impact in a qualifying NC county. This is not a startup grant, not an R&D grant, and not available to businesses in Charlotte, Raleigh, or other economically prosperous NC metro areas. If you are in Eastern NC, creating jobs, and doing anything other than pure retail, Golden LEAF is worth a conversation.
What Golden LEAF actually funds. The Foundation distributes North Carolina's share of the 1998 tobacco settlement proceeds -- approximately $40-60M per year in grants to NC communities and organizations. The primary program areas: (a) economic development grants to local governments and economic development organizations for infrastructure, industrial sites, and business attraction in distressed counties; (b) workforce training grants (community colleges, training providers) for skill development in economically distressed areas; (c) agricultural diversification grants for farmers and ag businesses transitioning away from tobacco dependence; (d) business development grants for companies creating jobs in eligible counties.
The county eligibility question. Golden LEAF has historically prioritized counties with high tobacco dependence, high unemployment, and low per capita income. The specific list of eligible counties changes based on economic data, but consistent targets include: Robeson County, Scotland County, Richmond County, Montgomery County, Anson County, Stanly County, Davidson County, Davie County, Randolph County, Surry County, Stokes County, Rockingham County, Caswell County, Person County, Granville County, Vance County, Warren County, Halifax County, Northampton County, Hertford County, Bertie County, Martin County, Pitt County, Lenoir County, Greene County, Wayne County, Duplin County, Sampson County, Bladen County, Columbus County, Brunswick County.
The application process. Golden LEAF's process starts with a letter of inquiry (LOI), not a full application. The LOI describes your organization, the project, the economic impact (especially jobs created in the county), and the funding requested. If Golden LEAF staff believe the project fits their priorities, they will invite a full application. Timeline from LOI to decision: typically 3-6 months for standard grants; faster for smaller awards through specific programs.
What not to do. Do not submit an LOI describing a product startup, a software company, or an R&D project without a clear community economic impact component. Golden LEAF evaluators are looking for: jobs created (especially at a living wage), capital investment in the county, connection to agricultural diversification or economic transition, and community partners (local government, economic development organization, community college) who have been consulted. A solo founder in Raleigh with a tech startup idea is not the profile Golden LEAF was built to serve.
Source: goldenleaf.org program descriptions; NC Master Settlement Agreement allocation data; NC Rural Economic Development Center partnership informationIf your NC textile, furniture, or legacy manufacturing business is pivoting to solar module, battery, or clean energy component manufacturing, you can potentially claim both Section 41 R&D credits (on process development and quality R&D for the new production line) and Section 45X production credits (per-unit, once manufacturing begins). These credits do not conflict with each other -- they operate on different activities (R&D development vs. commercial production). North Carolina's manufacturing base in Alamance, Guilford, Forsyth, Rowan, Cabarrus, Union, and Cleveland counties positions it as a candidate for this stack.
The opportunity in context. US solar manufacturing is expanding rapidly driven by Section 45X credits. Companies receiving $0.07 per watt for solar modules and $35 per kWh for battery cells are now competitive with Chinese manufacturers at scale. North Carolina's manufacturing labor force (skilled in precision manufacturing from textile and furniture production), available industrial sites in rural counties, and proximity to Southeast US solar installation markets create a plausible path for NC manufacturers to enter clean energy component production.
Phase 1: R&D and process development (Section 41 applies). Before a clean energy manufacturing line is commercially operational, you are doing qualifying R&D: testing manufacturing processes, developing quality control protocols, evaluating equipment configurations, and training workforce in new production methods. This is eligible for Section 41 credits if there is genuine technical uncertainty and a process of experimentation. An NC manufacturer spending 12-18 months developing a solar module production process can claim Section 41 credits on the qualifying wages and materials consumed during that period.
Phase 2: Commercial production (Section 45X applies, Section 41 fades). Once production is commercially operational -- your line is producing solar modules or battery cells for sale to unrelated parties -- Section 45X kicks in. You earn $0.07 per watt for every solar module sold. At 10 MW of annual production, that is $700,000 in annual credits. At 100 MW, $7M. Section 41 credits on the production-phase activity diminish as the work transitions from experimental to routine manufacturing.
The two-phase stack. Year 1-2 (development): Section 41 R&D credit on qualifying development wages and materials. Year 3+ (production): Section 45X per-unit production credits on qualifying components sold. The credits don't conflict because they apply to different activity types in different time periods.
Section 45X constraints for NC manufacturers. Wind energy components (blades, nacelles, towers) must be sold before December 31, 2027 -- a hard cliff with no phase-down. Solar and battery components phase down starting in 2030 (75% of credit rate) through 2032 (25%), reaching zero after 2032. A NC manufacturer committing capital to a clean energy production line in 2026 has a realistic 6-7 year window for solar and battery credits at meaningful rates. Foreign entity of concern restrictions (companies with ownership ties to China, Russia, Iran, or North Korea) apply -- domestic ownership documentation is required before claiming.
Source: IRC §41 (R&D credit); IRC §45X (Advanced Manufacturing Production Credit); IRS Form 7207 instructions; NC State University Industry Expansion Solutions manufacturing extension resourcesNo. North Carolina repealed its Article 3B R&D Tax Credits via Session Law 2013-316, effective for tax years beginning January 1, 2016. No new credits can be earned. Companies with pre-2016 carryforward balances (15-year window) may have remaining amounts, but NC's corporate income tax is simultaneously being phased to 0% (reaching zero for tax years beginning January 1, 2030), potentially leaving nothing to offset. The substitute strategy is the federal Section 41 R&D credit, which provides up to $500,000/year in payroll-tax offsets for qualifying small businesses.
RTP startups in Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill, Morrisville, and Cary have access to the full federal funding stack: (1) Federal Section 41 R&D QSB payroll-tax offset (up to $500K/yr for companies within 5 years of first revenue); (2) NIH SBIR Phase I ($323,090 for biotech, digital health, and medtech -- next receipt date September 5, 2026); (3) NSF SBIR Phase I ($305,000 for deep tech and engineering -- submissions expected to resume shortly); (4) NC IDEA SEED Grant ($50,000 for NC tech startups with demonstrated traction); (5) NC Biotechnology Center SBIR matching grants (for RTP life sciences companies that have won federal SBIR awards). The stack can deliver $750K to $1M+ in non-dilutive capital over 2-3 years for a well-positioned RTP biotech startup.
Charlotte-specific grant programs are limited compared to the RTP ecosystem, but federal programs are equally available. Charlotte's primary funding advantages: (1) SBA 7(a) loans through major Charlotte-area lenders (Bank of America, Truist, Wells Fargo) -- Charlotte is one of the highest SBA loan volume markets in NC; (2) Federal Section 41 R&D credit for Charlotte fintech, software, and engineering companies with qualifying R&D; (3) SBIR grants (NIH and NSF) for Charlotte tech companies that meet federal eligibility; (4) Section 48 ITC (30%) for commercial solar installations in Mecklenburg County. The Charlotte Regional Business Alliance and NC SBTDC's South Region at UNC Charlotte both maintain small business resource directories including current funding programs.
The NC Small Business and Technology Development Center (NC SBTDC) is the primary small business technical assistance network in North Carolina, with regional offices at UNC Chapel Hill (headquarters), NC State (Triangle East), UNC Greensboro (Triad), UNC Charlotte (South), East Carolina University (Eastern), Western Carolina University (Western), and additional service locations in Wilmington, Fayetteville, Boone, and elsewhere. NC SBTDC services are free or low-cost: business advising, financial planning, federal contracting assistance, market research, and grant readiness preparation. NC SBTDC advisors can help NC businesses prepare SBIR applications, identify qualifying R&D activities for the Section 41 credit, and connect with appropriate SBA lenders for 7(a) loans. Contact your regional NC SBTDC center at sbtdc.org.
North Carolina's corporate income tax rate is 2.0% for tax year 2025, and is scheduled to reach 0% for tax years beginning January 1, 2030 under SB 105 (2021). This phase-down is why NC's strategy shifted from targeted tax credits (like the repealed R&D credit) toward lower flat rates -- state policymakers believe a 0% corporate tax is more effective than a patchwork of credits. For NC businesses in 2026, the practical implication is that state income tax offsets are increasingly small -- the federal Section 41 credit (which offsets federal payroll taxes or federal income taxes, not NC taxes) is where the significant value lies. Companies evaluating whether to relocate to NC for tax purposes should note that by 2030, NC will have one of the most business-friendly corporate tax environments in the Southeast.
SBIR (Small Business Innovation Research) is exclusively for for-profit US small business concerns -- nonprofits and universities cannot receive SBIR awards as the prime awardee. However, for-profit spinouts from Duke, UNC, or NC State can apply for SBIR as the small business, and can subcontract up to one-third of Phase I research back to the originating university lab. The "two-thirds rule" requires that the majority of work (over 50% of Phase I costs) be performed by the small business itself, not the university. For a Duke or UNC spinout, the typical structure is: the spinout serves as prime awardee and performs the majority of technical work; the university lab serves as a paid subcontractor for specialized instrumentation or specific experiments. This is a common and accepted structure in NIH SBIR at Research Triangle Park. The spinout's founder (PI) must have primary employment at the spinout, not the university, at time of award.
The Economic Development Partnership of North Carolina (EDPNC) is the state's primary economic development agency, responsible for business recruitment, export promotion, tourism, and small business support. EDPNC operates the NC Small Business Center Network in coordination with NC community colleges, maintains international trade offices to assist NC exporters, and manages NC Innovation -- a program supporting NC's technology and innovation ecosystem. EDPNC's small business advisors can help NC businesses identify state-level incentive programs (Job Development Investment Grants, which remain active even though R&D credits were repealed), navigate EDPNC's business attraction and expansion services, and connect with appropriate regional resources. EDPNC does not directly fund grants to small businesses but can help identify applicable programs. Contact EDPNC at edpnc.com.
Yes. The One Big Beautiful Budget Act of 2024 (OBBBA) made federal Opportunity Zone incentives permanent through 2033 for new investments. NC has 252 designated Opportunity Zones, concentrated in Eastern NC counties (Bertie, Edgecombe, Martin, Northampton, Halifax, Vance, Warren), Western NC mountain counties (Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Swain), and urban Opportunity Zones in Charlotte (Mecklenburg County), Greensboro (Guilford County), and Fayetteville (Cumberland County). Investors who place eligible capital gains into a Qualified Opportunity Fund that invests in NC Opportunity Zone businesses can defer and reduce their capital gains taxes. For NC businesses in designated zones, this is a meaningful tool for attracting equity investment from investors with capital gains seeking deferral. The NC Opportunity Zone map is maintained by the NC Department of Commerce (NCDC) and EDPNC.
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