Bill Detail
H.R. 1707
Congress: 119
Title
Grown in America Act of 2025
Summary
Grown in America Act of 2025 This bill establishes a new tax credit (as part of the general business tax credit) for domestically produced agriculture. Specifically, the bill allows a tax credit for the lesser of (1) 25% of domestically produced agricultural commodity expenses multiplied by the ratio of such expenses to total agricultural commodity expenses (excluding expenses for agricultural commodities that cannot feasibly be produced domestically), or (1) $100 million. (Conditions apply). To qualify for the tax credit, a business’s average expenses (over three years) for domestically produced agricultural commodities must exceed a certain percentage of total agricultural commodity expenses (excluding expenses for agricultural commodities that cannot feasibly be produced domestically). The required percentage is 50% for 2026 and increases by 5% each year until it reaches 85% for tax years beginning after 2033. Under the bill, agricultural commodities include horticultural, viticultural, and dairy products; livestock and livestock products (excluding live animals); poultry and bee raising products; and farm-raised fish products. In addition, the general business tax credit limit based on a business’s tax liability is calculated separately for the domestically produced agriculture tax credit, and the credit is generally limited to 50% of a business’s net regular tax liability. Finally, domestically produced agriculture tax credit amounts in excess of such limitation may be carried forward for 10 years (rather than the 20 years allowed for other business tax credits).
Sponsor
Rep. David Kustoff [R-TN-8]
Status
Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.
Status as of Jun 17, 12:12 AM · synced 12d ago
Introduced
2025-02-27
Data source mode: congress-gov
Bill Engagement
Grown in America Act of 2025 This bill establishes a new tax credit (as part of the general business tax credit) for domestically produced agriculture.
Lobbyists on the case
- American Farm Bureau Fed1 filing · 9 lobs
- National Council of Farmer Cooperatives1 filing · 4 lobs
- Johnie Boatright2026 Q1
- Courtney Briggs2026 Q1
- Marlis Carson2026 Q1
- Travis Cushman2026 Q1
- Zachary Gihorski2026 Q1
- Brian Glenn2026 Q1
- Shelby Hagenauer2026 Q1
- Autumn Lankford2026 Q1