You closed the deal. The credit is on your return. The wire is out. And yet, three years later, an email from the sponsor lands in your inbox about a “project event.” Suddenly, the section 48 credit you booked with confidence is on the table again.
That is the uncomfortable truth of recapture. The section 48 investment tax credit does not fully vest at close. It vests over five years, 20% at a time, and a handful of project-level events can drag a portion of that credit back onto a buyer’s tax bill long after the ink has dried.
Here is what those events actually look like, and why sophisticated buyers structure around every one of them.
Why the Five-Year Clock Still Catches Buyers Off Guard
The rules under section 48 are older than most of the assets they now cover. They were written in a world of corporate-owned solar arrays, not transferable credits, tax equity partnerships, and third-party O&M contracts. The mechanics, though, have not softened. If the underlying energy property stops behaving like qualified property before the five-year holding period ends, the IRS reserves the right to reclaim a portion of the credit.
Buyers who focus only on the closing checklist tend to underestimate this. The credit was earned by the project. It stays tethered to the project.
The Five Events That Actually Trigger a Clawback
1. Disposition of the energy property. If the project is sold, transferred, or otherwise disposed of before year five, recapture is on the table. That includes fire-sale exits, sponsor pivots, and even certain intragroup transfers that look benign on paper but read as a disposition to the IRS.
2. Cessation as qualified energy property. The asset must remain the same kind of asset that qualified in the first place. Convert a solar facility into something else. Repurpose battery capacity outside its original use case. Take a geothermal system permanently offline. Each of these can flip the property out of section 48 eligibility mid-holding period.
3. Casualty loss and permanent damage. Storms, fires, and floods do not care about your recapture schedule. If a covered casualty destroys the property and it is not restored, the credit tied to the destroyed portion can be recaptured. Partial losses get partial treatment, but the accounting rarely feels fair to a buyer who never touched the asset.
4. Change in ownership at the project entity level. This one trips up buyers most often. A shift in partnership allocations, a flip that moves too fast, a sponsor buyout structured the wrong way, any of these can be treated as an indirect disposition of section 48 property. Tax equity structures are especially exposed here.
5. Tax-exempt use or lease to a disqualified party. If the asset is leased to or used by a tax-exempt organization in a manner inconsistent with the regulations, the credit fails to remain viable. This usually arises in subsequent transactions wherein the operator is changed and where the offtake arrangements are quietly evolved.
What Recapture Actually Looks Like on a Buyer’s Books
Recapture is not all-or-nothing. It steps down 20% each year the property stays in service, so an event in year two hits harder than an event in year four.
| Year of Triggering Event | Percentage of Credit Recaptured |
| Year 1 | 100% |
| Year 2 | 80% |
| Year 3 | 60% |
| Year 4 | 40% |
| Year 5 | 20% |
| After Year 5 | 0% |
For a buyer holding a $10 million credit, a year-two event is a $8 million problem. Interest and, in some cases, penalties layer on top. That is real money for the tax department to explain to the CFO.
Building Recapture Protection Into the Deal
Buyers who take section 48 seriously bake recapture defense into the transfer agreement itself. Indemnities scaled to the recapture schedule. Insurance backstops from carriers that actually understand energy tax credits. Ongoing reporting obligations from the seller so the buyer is not the last to know when a project event happens. Escrow that unwinds in step with the vesting schedule rather than releasing at close.
None of this eliminates the risk. It shifts it to the party that can actually monitor and control it, which is usually the sponsor.
Diligence matters too. Reviewing the project’s operating history, insurance coverage, partnership structure, and offtake arrangements before wire day is what separates a defensible section 48 purchase from a hopeful one.
Conclusion
Buying a section 48 credit is not a point-in-time event. It is a five-year relationship with a project you may never visit, run by a sponsor you may rarely speak to. Recapture is the reason that relationship needs to be structured with intent from day one.
The credit vests slowly. So should your comfort with the deal.






