IRS Issues Notice 2026-15 on Material Assistance and Prohibited Foreign Entity (PFE) Rules for Clean Energy Credits


In Brief:  

  • New Interim Guidance: On February 12, 2026, the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service issued Notice 2026-15, providing interim guidance on how taxpayers may satisfy the material assistance requirements enacted by the One Big Beautiful Big Act (OBBBA) for certain clean energy tax credits.
  • Expanded Foreign Entity Focus: The notice provides new detail on identifying prohibited foreign entities (PFEs) and calculating the Material Assistance Cost Ratio (MACR), a threshold test that can fully disallow credits if not satisfied.
  • Safe Harbors Introduced: Treasury and the IRS outline interim safe harbors intended to reduce data burdens and provide additional certainty while more comprehensive regulations are developed.
  • Practical Takeaways: Takeaways for project owners, tax credit transfers, and tax equity, especially towards the “all or nothing” determination.

Detailed Article

Overview of Notice 2026-15

Notice 2026-15 provides interim guidance on the material assistance and prohibited foreign entity restrictions applicable to certain clean energy tax credits, including the clean electricity production credit under IRC §45Y, the clean electricity investment credit under IRC §48E, and the advanced manufacturing production credit under IRC §45X.

Under the OBBBA, Congress adopted a fundamentally different approach to foreign content restrictions. Rather than focusing solely on where components are manufactured, the statute disallows credits where a qualified facility, energy storage technology (EST), or eligible component receives material assistance from a prohibited foreign entity.  Failure to satisfy the material assistance requirement results in complete disallowance of the credit, making compliance an all-or-nothing determination.

Notice 2026-15 confirms that material assistance is measured using a Material Assistance Cost Ratio (MACR), which compares qualifying costs to total direct costs associated with manufactured products (MPs) and manufactured product components (MPCs) incorporated into a facility or EST.

Interim Safe Harbors

Identification Safe Harbor:  Permits reliance on 2023–2025 Safe Harbor Tables to identify MPs, MPCs, and constituent materials.

Cost Percentage Safe Harbor: Allows use of IRS-assigned cost percentages instead of actual direct costs.

Certification Safe Harbor: Allows reliance on supplier certifications regarding PFE status and costs, provided the taxpayer has no reason to know the certification is inaccurate.

Practically Why This Matters for Project Owners, Tax Credit Transfers, or Tax Equity

Notice 2026‑15 is particularly significant for project owners seeking to monetize clean energy tax credits through transfers under IRC §6418 or through tax equity financing.  The material assistance rules operate as a complete disallowance provision, any failure to satisfy the MACR or prohibited foreign entity (PFE) requirements can render credits unavailable for monetization, regardless of project economics or performance.

From a project owner’s perspective, this guidance effectively moves material assistance compliance to a front‑end gating issue.  Credit buyers and tax equity investors are expected to require enhanced diligence, expanded representations and indemnities, and robust documentation demonstrating PFE compliance and appropriate reliance on safe harbors.  Inadequate support may delay closings, reduce pricing, or shift risk back to the sponsor through indemnities or other credit support.

In addition, the IRS is expected to focus on the owner’s methodology and documentation, including consistency in MACR calculations, support for total direct costs, reasonable reliance on supplier certifications, safeguards against circumvention, and substantiation of beginning of construction.  As a result, project owners should expect heightened documentation and coordination requirements across procurement, construction, and financing teams to ensure credits remain transferable and financeable.

For projects financed through tax equity, Notice 202615 elevates material assistance compliance to a core underwriting issue rather than a postclosing compliance matter.  The failure to satisfy the MACR or prohibited foreign entity (PFE) requirements is very concerning as it results in full credit disallowance, tax equity investors are likely to focus closely on supply chain assumptions, cost methodologies, and reliance on interim safe harbors during diligence.  From a project owner’s perspective, unresolved material assistance risk may translate into more conservative underwriting, additional sponsor representations, indemnities, or reserves, and increased scrutiny of procurement and construction documentation.  Projects with limited visibility into component sourcing or cost composition may face longer diligence timelines or reduced financing flexibility.

For tax credit transfers under IRC §6418, Notice 2026‑15 has direct implications for credit marketability and execution risk.  Credit buyers generally lack control over project development and operations, placing greater emphasis on front‑end eligibility and documentation at the time of transfer.  As a result, project owners should expect buyers to require detailed support for MACR calculations or safe harbor reliance, robust PFE certifications from suppliers, and contractual protections addressing anti‑circumvention risk.  Inadequate documentation or uncertainty around material assistance compliance may delay transfers, shift risk back to the sponsor through indemnities or pricing adjustments, or limit the pool of willing buyers altogether.

IRS Circular 230 Required Notice‐‐IRS regulations require that we inform you that to the extent this communication contains any statement regarding federal taxes, that statement was not written or intended to be used, and it cannot be used, by any person (i) for the purpose of avoiding federal tax penalties that may be imposed on that person, or (ii) to promote, market or recommend to another party any transaction or matter addressed herein. 

IRS Releases New Form 7220 for Reporting Prevailing Wage and Apprenticeship (PWA) Penalties


In Brief:  

  • New Compliance Form: The IRS has released Form 7220, Prevailing Wage and Apprenticeship (PWA) Verification and Corrections, which must be attached to the tax return when claiming increased credit or deduction amounts under energy credit provisions and when reporting PWA noncompliance penalties.
  • More Detail Than Expected: While some expected a streamlined replacement for prior narrative statements, Form 7220 requires facility-level detail, wage correction disclosures, apprenticeship shortfall calculations, and penalty computations.
  • Penalties Must Be Fully Calculated: All applicable PWA penalties, restitution (back wages), and statutory interest must be calculated and reported by the time the return is filed—there is no deferral or post-filing reconciliation mechanism built into the form.
  • Applies Across Multiple Credits: Form 7220 applies broadly to increased credits and deductions, including Sections 45, 45Y, 45Z, 48, 48E, 45Q, 45V, 179D, and others, requiring a separate Form 7220 for each facility or project.

Detailed Article

IRS Finalizes Standardized Reporting for PWA Penalties and Corrections

The Internal Revenue Service has released Form 7220, Prevailing Wage and Apprenticeship (PWA) Verification and Corrections, creating a standardized mechanism for reporting compliance with, and penalties arising from, the prevailing wage and apprenticeship requirements enacted under the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).  The form is effective for tax years in which taxpayers claim increased credit or deduction amounts beginning in 2025 and later.

Form 7220 replaces the previously required facility-specific narrative statements, but it does not reduce the underlying compliance burden.  Instead, the IRS has formalized that burden into a multi-part form that requires quantitative disclosure and penalty computation rather than general attestations.

Purpose and Scope of Form 7220

Form 7220 must be filed for each facility or project for which a taxpayer claims increased credit or deduction amounts by satisfying PWA requirements.  For this purpose, “facility” is broadly defined and may include property, projects, equipment, technology, or residences, depending on the applicable credit.

The form applies to a wide range of credits and deductions, including but not limited to Form 3468 (Investment Credit), Form 7218 (Clean Fuel Production Credit – Section 45Z), Form 7210 (Clean Hydrogen Production Credit), Form 7211 (Clean Electricity Production Credit), Form 8835 (Renewable Electricity Production Credit), Form 7205 (Energy Efficient Commercial Buildings Deduction), and Form 8933 (Carbon Oxide Sequestration Credit).  Each qualifying facility requires its own Form 7220, even if multiple facilities are reported on the same credit form.

Penalty Reporting Is Not Optional or Prospective

A key point that appears to be underappreciated by many taxpayers is that Form 7220 is not solely a verification form.  It is also the exclusive mechanism for calculating and reporting PWA penalties when prevailing wage or apprenticeship requirements were not fully satisfied.

When noncompliance has occurred, the form requires taxpayers to report correction payments made to laborers and mechanics (back wages), apprenticeship shortfall penalties where applicable, additional statutory penalties for intentional disregard, and interest on underpayments calculated through the filing date of the return.

Critically, all penalties, restitution, and interest must be fully calculated and paid by the time the return is filed.  The instructions do not provide a mechanism to estimate penalties, defer payment, or “true-up” amounts after filing.

Greater Granularity Than Anticipated

Although Form 7220 was initially viewed by some as a simplification, the IRS has embedded significant detail requirements into the form itself.  Taxpayers must disclose, among other items, construction start dates and placed-in-service dates, whether work was performed under a project labor agreement (PLA), whether prevailing wage correction payments were made, whether reliance is being placed on the good-faith apprenticeship exception, and ongoing compliance for post-placement alterations or repairs.

This structure effectively forces taxpayers to finalize PWA compliance and penalty exposure before filing, rather than relying on post-filing remediation.

Practical Takeaway

Form 7220 confirms that PWA compliance is now a filing-level determination, not an audit-level issue.  Taxpayers claiming increased energy credits should expect more front-end data collection, earlier coordination with contractors and payroll providers, full penalty modeling prior to return filing, and heightened risk where documentation or calculations are incomplete. In short, Form 7220 will require significantly more precision and advance planning than many initially expected.

IRS Circular 230 Required Notice‐‐IRS regulations require that we inform you that to the extent this communication contains any statement regarding federal taxes, that statement was not written or intended to be used, and it cannot be used, by any person (i) for the purpose of avoiding federal tax penalties that may be imposed on that person, or (ii) to promote, market or recommend to another party any transaction or matter addressed herein.