The in-person review of your SRED claim involves
determining whether you did eligible work, and then if it is decided that you
did, a reviewer makes a decision as to what it cost, i.e.: what expenditure
amounts are eligible.
The determination of the eligibility of the work done
relies upon the 5 questions addressed in a series of posts:
Quantifying your claim also involves reviewing the
costs associated with eligible work: engineering, design, operations research, mathematical
analysis, computer programming, data collection, testing, and psychological
research. This doesn’t mean that
everything you spend on these are eligible costs. The costs have to have been
incurred to do the research or experimental development that comprises the
project. If the expense was incurred for a reason other than to aid in
resolving the technological uncertainties of the project or to obtain
technological advancement, it is not claimable as part of that project.
Certain types of work are specifically excluded: market
research or sales promotion, quality control or routine testing, research in the
humanities or social sciences (excepting psychological research); exploring for minerals or petro-chemicals (but
developing tools for these activities can be eligible), commercial production,
style changes, and routine data collection.
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