R&D in engineering
From electrical to mechanical to materials science, engineering plays a crucial role in technical problem solving - R&D tax credits can fund this.
Who qualifies for R&D in engineering?
Your company could be investing time and money in a wide variety of activities, attempting to push through barriers in engineering. Solving technical problems to take concepts from theory to application qualify for R&D tax credits.
In the engineering sector, the only constant is change. Pioneering solutions tackle scientific or technological uncertainty.
What types of engineering projects may qualify for R&D tax credits?
Control system design
Creating unique computer control programmes and producing innovative programmable logic controllers.
Improving operations
Creating improvements in techniques and methods, reducing faults, achieving complex material forms and developing next generation capabilities.
Materials development
Overcoming problems with material compatibilities, reducing costs, meeting regulatory change or creating new finishes e.g. colours or textures.
Copying with a difference
Replicating a product, device or process without infringing patents; using cheaper materials, faster schemes of assembly, or introducing sustainable techniques.
What will an R&D engineering team look like?
Varying roles related to engineering activities, from polymer scientists, structural, electrical or mechanical engineers to welders.
What might qualifying R&D projects involve in engineering?
- Experimental design iterations aimed at improving performance, reliability, quality or safety requirements
- Overcoming environmental or spatial constraints
- Developing solutions to accommodate mechanical components
- Improving structural schemes and construction techniques
- Combining technologies to work in a way they were not originally intended
- Improvements to speed, yield, strength, longevity, tolerance, throughput, etc.