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At 5%, South Carolina’s Corporate Income Tax Rate is among the lowest in the Southeast.

The state uses a single factor sales formula for apportioning income.

Many companies qualify for a Job Tax Credit, which eliminates up to 50% of a company's corporate income tax liability for a specified number of years.

The Corporate License Tax Rate is $1 for each $1,000 of capital stock and paid-in or capital surplus, plus a $15 annual fee.

For additional information regarding the South Carolina taxes, contact the South Carolina Department of Revenue.

  • Corporate Income Tax

    In South Carolina, businesses that transact business partly within and partly outside of South Carolina are only taxed on the portion of income derived from their in-state operations.

    Allocated Income: Certain corporate income is allocated to the corporation for South Carolina tax purposes before apportionment is applied. This includes interest, dividends, royalties, rents, property sale gains and losses and personal services income associated with the South Carolina facility.

    Apportioned Income: For companies engaged in manufacturing, selling or distributing tangible personal property, South Carolina offers a single factor apportionment formula. A company’s income will be apportioned to South Carolina by multiplying the net income remaining after allocation by a fraction, the numerator of which is the value of sales made or gross receipts from within South Carolina and the denominator is the total value of sales or gross receipts of the taxpayer.

    A 5% corporate income tax rate is applied to the sum of these incomes. The resulting figure is the company’s state corporate income taxes.

    The following shows the corporate income tax liability for a company based on the following assumptions.

    1. Total Sales $10,000,000
    2. Sales in SC $750,000

    Based on those assumptions, the apportionment formula is:

    $750,000/$10,000,000 = 7.5%

    7.5% = Amount of income apportioned to SC

    If 7.5% of the company’s income is derived from its South Carolina operations, then the company will owe $37,500 in corporate income taxes before credits based on the South Carolina corporate income tax rate of 5%.

    ($10,000,000 x 7.5%) x 5% = $37,500

    In addition, South Carolina allows businesses a carry forward for net operating losses.

    Businesses locating in South Carolina will benefit from:

    1. One of the lowest corporate income tax rates in the Southeast.
    2. A business friendly method to determine income subject to the state’s corporate income tax rate.
    3. Numerous credits and methods to reduce and eliminate corporate income tax liability.
  • Corporate License Fee (Franchise Tax)

    All corporations must pay an annual fee to the Department of Revenue. The rate is one mill per dollar ($0.001) of a proportion of total paid-in-capital and paid-in-surplus, plus $15. Earned surplus (retained earnings) is not included in the base when calculating this tax. For corporations doing business outside the state, the license fee is determined by apportionment—the same way South Carolina corporate income tax is computed. The minimum corporate license fee is $25.

  • Corporate Income Tax Credits

    In addition to a low corporate income tax rate and a favorable formula for determining the income subject to that rate, South Carolina provides a myriad of credits that in some cases can completely eliminate a company’s corporate income tax liability for up to 10, or in some cases, 15 years.

  • Jobs Tax Credits

    Jobs Tax Credits

    The Jobs Tax Credit is a valuable financial incentive that rewards new and expanding companies for creating jobs in South Carolina. In order to qualify, companies must create and maintain a certain number of net new jobs in a taxable year. The number of new jobs is calculated as the increase in the average monthly employment from one year to the next.

    The following types of businesses qualify for the Jobs Tax Credit:

    • Manufacturing and processing, warehousing and distribution, research and development, agribusiness operations and qualifying technology intensive facilities must create a monthly average of 10 net new jobs.
    • Corporate office facilities housing a majority of the headquarters functions must create a monthly average of 10 net new jobs.
    • Qualified service-related facilities must meet the following criteria.
      • In a Tier IV County, service facilities must create a monthly average of 10 net new jobs to qualify.
      • In a Tier I, II, or III County, service facilities must create in a single taxable year a monthly average of:
        • 175 new jobs;
        • 150 new jobs in a building that has been vacant for at least 12 months;
        • 100 new jobs with an average salary 1.5 times the lower of the state or the county per capita income;
        • 50 new jobs with an average salary 2 times the lower of the state or the county per capita income; or
        • 25 new jobs with an average salary 2.5 times the lower of the state or the county per capita income.

    The value of the credit depends on the county's development tier as set forth below:

     

    County's Development Tier
    Tier I$1,500
    Tier II$2,750
    Tier III$20,250
    Tier IV$25,000

    Counties are re-ranked every year based on unemployment rates and per capita income, and the ranking of a county may change from year to year. Click here to view the county tier map.

    A county may also join with another county to form a “multi-county industrial park.” Under this arrangement, a county agrees to share the property taxes with a “partner” county. This partnership raises the value of the credits by $1,000 per job, meaning credits from $2,500 to $26,000 per job may be available for qualifying companies.

    If the company is a manufacturing, processing, warehousing and distribution, research and development, agribusiness, or qualified technology intensive facility or a corporate office that has fewer than 99 employees worldwide, the company could qualify for the Small Business Jobs Tax Credit by creating a monthly average of 2 net new jobs, instead of 10. Under the Small Business Jobs Tax Credit, the company may only get the full credit amount for net new jobs that pay 120% of the county’s average hourly rate. For jobs that pay less than 120% of the county’s average hourly wage rate, credits from $750 to $12,500 per job (or $1,750 to $13,000 in a multi-county industrial park) may be available for qualifying companies.

    For both the Jobs Tax Credit and the Small Business Jobs Tax Credit, the credit is available for a five-year period beginning with Year 2 (Year 1 is used to establish the created job levels.) The credit can be applied against corporate income tax or premium tax, but cannot exceed 50% of the year’s tax liability. Unused credits may be carried forward for 15 years from the year earned.

    The following table illustrates the value of Jobs Tax Credits for a qualified company assuming the creation of 100 net new jobs in a county designated as Tier III and at a site designated as a multi-county industrial park.

    Illustration of Estimated Job Tax Credits Tier II County
    YearCreditNumber of Job CreditsAnnual Total
    1Establish Qualification for Credit  
    2$3,750100$375,000
    3$3,750100$375,000
    4$3,750100$375,000
    5$3,750100$375,000
    6$3,750100$375,000
    Total Value  $1,875,000

    Please note, the number of new jobs is calculated as the increase in average monthly employment from one year to the next. Should the number of jobs created also increase or decrease, the total credit will likewise vary. We have calculated these amounts assuming that the county in which the project located remains a Tier II County.

  • Corporate Headquarters Tax Credit

    In an effort to offset the costs associated with relocating or expanding a corporate headquarters facility, South Carolina provides a generous 20% tax credit based on the value of the actual portion of the facility dedicated to the headquarters operation or direct lease costs for the first five years of operation. The credit can be applied against either corporate income tax or the license fee. These credits are not limited in their ability to eliminate corporate income taxes and can potentially eliminate corporate income taxes for as long as 10 years from the year earned.

    Eligibility for this credit is determined by meeting each of the following criteria:

    • The company must invest at least $50,000 in qualifying real property costs. They must also create a minimum of 40 new full-time jobs that are performing headquarters related functions and services, and have gross wages equal to or greater than two times the State per capita income. An executive is an employee who spends 80% of his or her time on corporate-wide duties.)
    • The facility must be the location where the majority of the company’s financial, legal, personnel, planning and/or other staff functions are handled on a regional or national basis.
    • The facility must be the sole corporate headquarters within the region or nation with other facilities that report to it. A region is defined as a geographical area comprised of either five states (including South Carolina) or two or more states (including South Carolina) if the entire business operations of the company are performed in fewer than five states.
  • Investment Tax Credit

    South Carolina allows manufacturers locating or expanding in South Carolina a one-time credit against a company’s corporate income tax of up to 2.5% of a company’s investment in new production equipment. The actual value of the credit depends on the applicable recovery period for property under the Internal Revenue Code. The following table illustrates the credit value for the various years outlined in the code.

    Recovery PeriodCredit Value
    3 years0.5%
    5 years1%
    7 years1.5%
    10 years2%
    15 years or more2.5%

     

    The credit may be used to offset up to 100% of corporate income tax liability, and unused credits may be carried forward for up to 10 years.

  • Research and Development Tax Credit

    In order to reward companies for increasing research and development in a taxable year, South Carolina offers a credit equal to 5% of the taxpayer’s qualified research expenses as defined in Section 41 of the Internal Revenue Code.

    The credit taken in any one taxable year may not exceed 50% of the company’s remaining tax liability after all other credits have been applied. Any unused portion of the credit can be carried forward for 10 years from the date of the qualified expenditure.

  • Port Volume Increase Tax Credit

    Port Volume Increase Tax Credit

    South Carolina provides a possible income tax credit or withholding tax credit to manufacturers or distributors or companies engaged in warehousing, freight forwarding, freight handling, goods processing, cross docking, transloading or wholesale of goods. To be eligible for this credit, a company must have 75 net tons of noncontainerized cargo, 385 cubic meters or 10 loaded TEUs transported through a South Carolina port facility for their base year and then must increase their port cargo volume by 5% over base-year totals. The base year port cargo volume will be re-calculated every year after the initial base year.

    The total amount of tax credits allowed to all qualifying companies is limited to $15 million per calendar year. A company must submit an application to the Coordinating Council to determine its qualification for, the amount of, and the type of any tax credit it will receive. Any unused credits may be carried forward for 5 years.

  • Tax Credit for Increases in Purchases of South Carolina Agricultural Products

    Tax Credit for Increases in Purchases of South Carolina Agricultural Products

    South Carolina provides a possible income tax credit or withholding tax credit to agribusiness or agricultural packaging operations.  To be eligible for this credit, a company must have a base year in which the company purchases more than $100,000 of agricultural products that have been certified as grown in South Carolina by the South Carolina Department of Agriculture (“SCDA”) and then must increase number of agricultural units purchased in the following year by at least 15% over base-year unit totals.  The base-year unit amount will be re-calculated every year after the initial base year. 

    A company must submit an application to the Coordinating Council by no later than September 30 of the year following the year in which it increases purchases.  Such application will be reviewed by the staff of the Coordinating Council and SCDA to determine eligibility.  Based on the recommendation of SCDA the Coordinating Council will determine the amount of, and the type of any tax credit, the company will receive.  The credit may not exceed $100,000 per taxpayer in any one year.  The total amount of tax credits allowed to all qualifying companies is limited to $2,000,000 per year.  Any unused credits may be carried forward for 5 years.

  • Corporate Income Tax Moratorium

    Companies creating net new jobs in certain of South Carolina’s economically distressed counties will benefit from a corporate income tax moratorium. Companies that qualify for the moratorium will be able to entirely eliminate their state corporate income tax liability for a period of either 10 or 15 years. In order to qualify, at least 90% of the company’s total investment in South Carolina must be in a county where the unemployment rate is twice the state average. The length of the moratorium depends on the number of net new full-time jobs created. Companies creating at least 100 net new full-time jobs in a five year period qualify for a 10 year moratorium, and companies creating at least 200 net new full-time jobs in a five year period qualify for a 15 year moratorium. The moratorium period begins once a company meets the required job target.

    In order to qualify for the moratorium, a company must also obtain certification through an application process from the Coordinating Council that the project will have a significant beneficial effect on the region for which it is planned, and that the benefits of the project to the public exceed its costs. If a company is approved for the moratorium, it must enter into a contract with the South Carolina Department of Revenue.

    For 2024, only Chesterfield, Dillon and Marlboro Counties have been designated as moratorium counties.

Green Initiative Credits

  • Recycling Facility Tax Credit

    In order to reward qualified recycling facilities, South Carolina offers a credit equal to 30% of the cost of recycling property placed into service each year. A qualified recycling facility is one that has a $150 million dollar investment within five years and that manufactures products for sale composed of 50% or more postconsumer waste material by weight or volume. There is no limit to the amount of tax that can be offset with the credit, and the credit can be carried forward indefinitely.

  • Solar Energy Tax Credit

    South Carolina allows a company a credit against income taxes equal to 25% of the costs incurred by the company in the purchase and installation of a solar energy system, including a small hydropower system, for heating water, space heating, air cooling, energy efficient daylighting, heat reclamation, energy-efficient demand response or the generation of electricity in or on a facility in South Carolina owned by the company. The credit cannot be claimed before installation of the system is completed. The amount of the credit may not exceed $3,500 for each facility or 50% of the income tax liability for the taxable year, whichever is less. Unused credit can be carried forward for 10 years.

    A “system” includes all controls, tanks, pumps, heat exchangers, and other equipment used directly and exclusively for the solar energy system. It does not include any land or structural elements of the building such as walls, roofs or other equipment ordinarily contained in the structure. To qualify for the credit, the system must be certified for performance by the nonprofit Solar Rating & Certification Corporation or a comparable entity endorsed by the State Energy Office.

  • Energy Conservation and Renewable Energy Tax Credit

    South Carolina allows a taxpayer a credit equal to 25% of all expenditures incurred during the taxable year for the purchase and installation of the following energy conservation and renewable energy production measures:

    • Conservation tillage equipment
    • Drip/trickle irrigation systems including all necessary measures and equipment
    • Dual purpose combination truck and crane equipment

    A company may claim the credit only one time for each of the three measures in a lifetime. The maximum credit that may be claimed for each measure is $2,500. In the case of pass through entities, the credit is determined at the entity level and is limited to $2,500. Any unused credit can be carried forward for 5 years.

  • Textile Revitalization Credit

    There are credits for rehabilitating abandoned textile mill sites that encourage businesses to renovate, improve, and redevelop abandoned textile mill sites.

    Sites that are eligible are abandoned sites directly used for textile manufacturing operations or ancillary uses for, or designed for use by, textile manufacturing. “Abandoned” means that at least 80% of the site has been closed for a period of at least one year.

    A company that improves, renovates or redevelops an eligible site may be eligible for one of two tax credits:

    • A credit against income taxes or license taxes equal to 25% of the rehabilitation expenses. This credit is to be taken in equal installments over five years beginning with the tax year in which the site is placed in service. The credit may offset up to 100% of income or license tax liability. Unused credits can be carried forward up to five years. In this case, the taxpayer must file a Notice of Intent to Rehabilitate with the Department of Revenue before receiving building permits.
    • A credit against real property taxes equal to 25% of the rehabilitation expenses of an eligible site multiplied by the local taxing ratio of each local taxing entity that has consented to the tax credit. This credit can offset up to 75% of property taxes for a period of up to eight years. To receive this credit, the county or municipality in which the site is located must determine the eligibility of the site and the proposed project. A majority vote of the local governing body must approve the project, and the determinations and approval must be made by public hearing and ordinance. In this case, the taxpayer must file a Notice of Intent to Rehabilitate with the local government before incurring rehabilitation expenses.
  • Revitalization of Abandoned Building Credit

    In order to qualify for this credit, taxpayer must improve, renovate or redevelop an eligible site for income producing purposes and incur rehabilitation expenses in an amount

    • Greater than $250,000 for building in unincorporated area of a county or in a municipality of a county with a population of more than 25,000 persons;
    • Greater than $150,000 for building in unincorporated area of a county or in a municipality of a county with a population of at least 1,000 persons but less than 25,000 persons; or
    • Greater than $75,000 for building in unincorporated area of a county or in a municipality of a county with a population of less than 1,000 persons.

    Sites that are eligible are buildings or structures, at least 66% of which has been closed continuously or otherwise nonoperational for at least five years (excluding a building used immediately preceding as a single-family residence) from the date that the taxpayer files a Notice of Intent to Rehabilitate.

    A qualifying taxpayer may be eligible for one of two tax credits:

    • A credit against income taxes or license taxes equal to 25% of the rehabilitation expenses. This credit is to be taken in equal installments over three years beginning with the tax year in which the site is placed in service. The credit can offset up to 100% of the income or license tax liability and the credit may not exceed $750,000 in any one tax year. Unused credits can be carried forward up to five years. In this case, the taxpayer must file the Notice of Intent to Rehabilitate with the Department of Revenue before receiving building permits.
    • A credit against real property taxes equal to 25% of the rehabilitation expenses of an eligible site multiplied by the local taxing ratio of each local taxing entity that has consented to the tax credit. This credit can offset up to 75% of property taxes for a period of up to eight years. To receive this credit, the county or municipality in which the site is located must determine the eligibility of the site and the proposed project. A majority vote of the local governing body must approve the project, and the determinations and approval must be made by public hearing and ordinance. In this case, the taxpayer must file the Notice of Intent to Rehabilitate with the county or municipality before incurring expenses.

    Did You Know? Companies that rehabilitate abandoned facilities may be eligible for tax credits. These credits encourage businesses to renovate, improve and redevelop these abandoned areas.

  • Alternative Motor Vehicle Credit

    South Carolina allows a resident taxpayer a credit against income taxes equal to 20% of the federal credit allowed under Internal Revenue Code §30B, without regard to the federal phase-out limits of Internal Revenue Code §30B(f). Any unused credit can be carried forward for 5 years. The credit is claimed on Form TC-35, “Alternative Motor Vehicle Credit.” For a taxpayer to qualify for the credit, the taxpayer must be eligible for the federal credit pursuant to Internal Revenue Code §30B. Internal Revenue Code §30B provides an alternative motor vehicle credit equaling the total of the: (1) qualified fuel cell motor vehicle credit, (2) advanced lean burn technology motor vehicle credit, (3) qualified hybrid motor vehicle credit, and (4) qualified alternate fuel motor vehicle credit. For purposes of this credit, the provisions of Internal Revenue Code §30B are deemed permanent. 

  • Credit for Distribution, Dispensing, and Storing Equipment for Alternative Fuels

    South Carolina Code allows a taxpayer a tax credit for purchasing, constructing, installing and placing in service in the State eligible property that is used for distribution, dispensing, or storing alternative fuel at a new or existing commercial fuel distribution or dispensing facility in South Carolina. The credit is equal to 25% of the cost of purchasing, constructing and installing the eligible property. The credit must be taken in three equal annual installments beginning with the tax year the property is placed in service. If in one of the years the credit installment accrues the property used for distributing, dispensing, or storing renewable fuel is disposed of or taken out of service and is not replaced, the credit expires and the taxpayer may not take any remaining installment of the credit. 

    “Taxpayer” means any sole proprietor, partnership, corporation of any classification, limited liability company, or association taxable as a business entity. Also, the word taxpayer includes the State or any agency or instrumentality, authority, or political subdivision, including municipalities. 

    “Eligible property” includes any pump, compressor, storage tank, or related equipment that is directly and exclusively used for distribution, dispensing, or storing alternative fuel. The equipment must be labeled for this purpose and clearly identified as associated with alternative fuel. 

    “Alternative fuel” means compressed natural gas, liquified natural gas, or liquefied petroleum gas, dispensed for use in motor vehicles and compressed natural gas, liquified natural gas, or liquefied petroleum gas, dispensed by a distributor or facility. 

    General provisions relating to the above credits are summarized below:

    1.    Any unused portion of the unexpired credit may be carried forward for 10 tax years. 
    2.    These credits are claimed on Form TC-59, “Alternative Fuel Property Credit.” 
    3.    A taxpayer who claims any other credit for the cost of purchasing, constructing and installing property at the facility, may not claim this credit for the same costs. 
    4.    The State or any agency or instrumentality, authority or political subdivision, including municipalities, may transfer the credit, but if the entity transfers the credit, it must notify the Department of Revenue of the transfer. 

    NOTE: This credit is only available for property or facilities placed in service before January 1, 2026.