Everything you need to know about the Energy-Efficient Commercial Buildings Tax Deduction — eligibility, deduction amounts, compliance pathways, and how Accelerate helps you maximize this valuable federal tax benefit.
The questions below walk through Section 179D in a logical order — from what the deduction is and who qualifies, to how amounts are calculated, documentation requirements, and how it fits into a broader tax strategy.
Section 179D is a federal tax deduction for energy-efficient commercial buildings. It allows building owners, and in some cases qualifying designers, to deduct the cost of installing energy-efficient systems when those improvements reduce building energy use by a required threshold.
The deduction applies to energy-efficient property installed as part of three main building systems:
Originally enacted under the Energy Policy Act of 2005, Section 179D was significantly expanded by the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, which increased potential deduction amounts and broadened eligibility for both building owners and designers.
Standard tax depreciation spreads deductions over many years (often 39 years for commercial property). Section 179D is different: it provides an immediate, first-year deduction for qualifying energy-efficient improvements, subject to applicable caps and rules.
That accelerated timing can significantly improve cash flow because it allows you to offset current taxable income rather than waiting decades to recover the same costs through regular depreciation schedules.
Important: When you claim a 179D deduction, the tax basis of the energy-efficient property must be reduced by the amount of the deduction. This prevents double-counting the same tax benefit through both 179D and standard depreciation.
Section 179D is a tax deduction, not a tax credit. A deduction reduces your taxable income; a credit would reduce your tax liability dollar-for-dollar.
The actual tax savings therefore depend on your marginal tax rate. For example, a $500,000 Section 179D deduction at a 37% tax bracket would translate to roughly $185,000 in tax savings.
For property placed in service on or after January 1, 2023, Section 179D is available to two broad groups:
Specified tax-exempt entities that can allocate the deduction to designers include:
This “designer allocation” significantly expands the reach of 179D, allowing architects, engineers, and certain contractors to benefit from qualifying improvements on schools, universities, government facilities, hospitals, and similar tax-exempt buildings.
In general, a building may qualify if it meets all of the following:
Common examples include:
Note: Single-family homes and low-rise residential properties (1–3 stories) typically do not qualify for 179D, but may be eligible under separate provisions such as the Section 45L new energy-efficient home credit.
Eligible property must be part of one of the three covered building systems and contribute to meeting the required energy savings threshold:
1. Interior lighting systems
2. HVAC and hot water systems
3. Building envelope
Important: Process loads such as manufacturing equipment, plug loads, or on-site renewable generation (like solar PV) are generally not treated as qualifying 179D energy-efficient building property, even though they may be relevant for other incentives.
For property placed in service in 2023 and later, the project must achieve at least 25% total annual energy and power cost savings relative to the applicable reference standard to qualify for any deduction.
The way this savings is measured depends on the compliance pathway used:
As savings increase above 25%, the available deduction scales up in a linear fashion until it maxes out at 50% savings.
Yes. Section 179D applies to both new construction and eligible retrofits of existing buildings.
For the Alternative (Measurement) Pathway, which is specifically designed for retrofits:
The Traditional (Modeling) Pathway can also be used for retrofits by modeling the existing building and proposed improvements against the reference standard.
For property placed in service in 2023 and later, the deduction is generally the lesser of:
There are two tiers: a base deduction and a higher PWA-compliant deduction. Recent inflation-adjusted ranges have been:
| Tax Year | Base Deduction Range | With PWA Bonus | Increase per % Saving |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | $0.54 – $1.07 / sq ft | $2.68 – $5.36 / sq ft | $0.02 base / $0.10 PWA |
| 2024 | $0.57 – $1.13 / sq ft | $2.83 – $5.65 / sq ft | $0.02 base / $0.11 PWA |
| 2025 | $0.58 – $1.16 / sq ft | $2.90 – $5.81 / sq ft | $0.02 base / $0.12 PWA |
Example: A 100,000 sq ft building that achieves 50% energy savings and meets PWA requirements in 2025 could qualify for a deduction of up to $581,000 (100,000 × $5.81 per sq ft), subject to cost and other limitations.
The Inflation Reduction Act introduced substantially higher 179D deduction amounts (roughly 5× the base amount) for projects that satisfy both prevailing wage and registered apprenticeship requirements:
Prevailing wage requirements:
Apprenticeship requirements:
Detailed PWA rules and correction mechanisms are outlined in IRS Notice 2022-61 and related guidance.
Because PWA projects can qualify for 179D deductions at up to five times the base rate, it is often worth confirming whether your contractors and documentation meet these requirements before finalizing a project.
The deduction increases as energy savings improve above the 25% minimum threshold:
This sliding scale is designed to reward deeper efficiency improvements with larger deductions.
Yes. There are rolling lookback limits that reduce the maximum available 179D deduction if prior deductions were claimed on the same building:
This replaced the pre-2023 “lifetime cap” approach and allows buildings to qualify for additional deductions over time as new projects are placed in service, once the lookback window has passed.
Current guidance describes two primary ways to show that a project meets the 179D savings requirements:
1. Traditional (Modeling) Pathway – EECBP
2. Alternative (Measurement) Pathway – EEBRP
Under the modeling pathway, a qualified energy modeler:
This pathway is often used for new construction, large complex buildings, or projects where modeling can capture savings more precisely than measurement alone.
The measurement pathway is designed for retrofits and relies on actual energy consumption data:
Key requirement: For the measurement pathway, the building must have been in service for at least five years before the QRP is established.
The applicable ASHRAE 90.1 reference standard depends on construction timing and placed-in-service dates. Current rules often follow this pattern:
| Construction Start | Placed in Service | ASHRAE Standard |
|---|---|---|
| Before Jan 1, 2023 | Any date | ASHRAE 90.1-2007 |
| On/after Jan 1, 2023 | Before Jan 1, 2027 | ASHRAE 90.1-2007 |
| On/after Jan 1, 2023 | After Dec 31, 2026 | ASHRAE 90.1-2019 |
These standards serve as the “minimum code” baseline against which your building’s efficiency is measured. Newer ASHRAE versions generally make the baseline more stringent, which can influence modeled savings and project economics.
179D is intended to be an engineering-driven deduction, so documentation is critical. A typical package includes:
Good documentation makes it easier for your tax advisor to file the return and easier to respond if the IRS has questions later.
A qualified individual must meet specific requirements outlined in IRS guidance. In general, they should:
Accelerate partners with experienced energy engineers who meet these requirements and focus specifically on 179D-compliant certifications.
You can generally combine Section 179D with other incentives, but you cannot double-count the same dollars in your tax basis calculation. In practice, that means:
We model the interaction of 179D with other incentives so that your tax advisor can choose the combination that delivers the best net result while staying within IRS rules.
The 179D deduction is generally claimed in the tax year the property is placed in service — in other words, the year the system is installed, operational, and ready for its intended use.
In some situations, it may be possible to claim 179D on a prior year by filing an amended return, subject to the normal statute of limitations (often three years from the original filing date). Your tax advisor decides the exact filing mechanics.
Yes. There is now a construction-start deadline.
Under the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” (Public Law 119-21), the 179D commercial building tax deduction does not apply to property for which construction begins after June 30, 2026 as currently written.
Critical timeline: To qualify under current law, construction must begin on or before June 30, 2026. Projects already in construction, or completed before this date and otherwise qualifying, remain eligible.
This deadline creates a planning window for building owners, developers, and designers considering major efficiency upgrades or new projects that could benefit from 179D.
In many cases, yes. If you completed qualifying projects in prior years but did not claim 179D, you may be able to:
Key considerations include:
We routinely review past projects to identify missed 179D opportunities and help your advisory team decide whether retroactive claims are worthwhile.
Accelerate provides end-to-end support on 179D projects, from initial screening through final certification and tax return support. Typical steps include:
Section 179D is just one piece of a broader tax strategy. As an engineering-focused specialty firm, we help coordinate 179D with:
The goal is to maximize total after-tax benefit, not just optimize one code section in isolation.
For an initial 179D assessment, we typically ask for:
If you don’t have everything in hand, that’s okay — we can help identify what’s needed and coordinate with your design and construction teams.