No. This was specifically answered by the IRS in their "Q&A on Tax Credits for Sections 25C and 25D " provided in Notice 2013-70.
Q-5: May a taxpayer claim the credits in the year of purchase if installation of the qualifying property occurs in a later year?
A-5: No. A taxpayer may not claim the credits until the year the property is installed. The installation must be completed before the end of 2013 for the § 25C credit and before the end of 2016 for the § 25D credit.
25D is what we're discussing.
They wouldn't know unless 1) you get audited and 2)they challenge the specific credit. Sometimes audits are triggered programmatically based on "computational red flags" which are usually tax payers doing some wildly inappropriate things that are obvious. Some audits are targeted sweeps based on a specific/recent circumstance (some folks would point to tea party donations as an example).
But to answer your question, they wouldn't need to "check for full operation". You would have to prove it was placed in service within the tax year you are claiming the credit. They challenge, you prove it.... or not.
Off topic and not advice about this question: My CPAs always told me to leave a few small things for the auditor to find. Feeding him easy crumbs allows him to move on to the next case, albeit a little hungry, with his head held high and he didn't get full off you. Otherwise he'll dig and dig to find something somewhere, legit or not. You obviously shouldn't take that too far, you abuse it and you get tagged with fraudulent behavior and they can start digging back several more years.
Q-5: May a taxpayer claim the credits in the year of purchase if installation of the qualifying property occurs in a later year?
A-5: No. A taxpayer may not claim the credits until the year the property is installed. The installation must be completed before the end of 2013 for the § 25C credit and before the end of 2016 for the § 25D credit.
25D is what we're discussing.
They wouldn't know unless 1) you get audited and 2)they challenge the specific credit. Sometimes audits are triggered programmatically based on "computational red flags" which are usually tax payers doing some wildly inappropriate things that are obvious. Some audits are targeted sweeps based on a specific/recent circumstance (some folks would point to tea party donations as an example).
But to answer your question, they wouldn't need to "check for full operation". You would have to prove it was placed in service within the tax year you are claiming the credit. They challenge, you prove it.... or not.
Off topic and not advice about this question: My CPAs always told me to leave a few small things for the auditor to find. Feeding him easy crumbs allows him to move on to the next case, albeit a little hungry, with his head held high and he didn't get full off you. Otherwise he'll dig and dig to find something somewhere, legit or not. You obviously shouldn't take that too far, you abuse it and you get tagged with fraudulent behavior and they can start digging back several more years.
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