Insights

Ordinary Income Tax Strategies: Solar vs. Oil and Gas vs. CLATs

Written by Paulo Aguilar, CFA, CAIA | Mar 30, 2026

For high earners, ordinary income is often the most difficult tax exposure to manage. Unlike capital gains, it is recurring, highly visible, and taxed at the highest marginal rates. As income rises, so does the need for strategies that address it deliberately rather than reactively.

Solar investments, oil and gas programs, and Charitable Lead Annuity Trusts, or CLATs, are frequently discussed together because they all reduce ordinary income. That comparison is useful, but it can also be misleading. These strategies operate very differently, solve different problems, and impose different constraints.

Ordinary income strategies should be chosen for fit and durability, not for headline deductions.

This article outlines how these three approaches work, where each tends to fit best, and why comparison without context often leads to poor decisions.

What Makes Ordinary Income Planning Different

Ordinary income includes wages, bonuses, RSUs, business income, and active 1099 earnings. Unlike capital gains, it cannot be deferred simply by holding an asset longer. Once earned, the tax exposure is largely fixed unless addressed within the tax year.

Key considerations

    • Marginal tax rates are high and progressive
    • Timing is rigid
    • Planning errors are difficult to unwind

This rigidity makes structure and execution especially important.

Solar as an Ordinary Income Strategy

Solar strategies rely on a combination of investment tax credits and accelerated depreciation tied to renewable energy projects. When structured properly, these benefits can offset active income.

The strategy is front-loaded and highly effective when executed correctly.

Key considerations

    • Requires compliance with material participation rules
    • Benefits depend on project completion and timing
    • Primary value is tax reduction, not income

Solar tends to fit high-income earners who can engage with the structure and absorb large deductions in a single year.

Oil and Gas as an Ordinary Income Strategy

Oil and gas programs rely primarily on intangible drilling costs and accelerated depreciation. These deductions are typically available in the year capital is deployed and do not require the same participation thresholds as solar.

The trade-off is volatility and commodity exposure.

Key considerations

    • Deductions are largely front-loaded
    • Cash flow is variable and market-dependent
    • Principal recovery is uncertain

Oil and gas often appeals to investors who value simplicity and timing flexibility but are comfortable with economic risk.

CLATs as an Ordinary Income Strategy

A CLAT is structurally different from energy-based strategies. It front-loads a charitable deduction while distributing payments to charity over time. The remaining assets may eventually pass to family beneficiaries if investment performance exceeds the trust’s hurdle rate.

This is not a tax-first strategy. It is a charitable and estate planning tool with tax consequences.

Key considerations

    • Requires genuine charitable intent
    • Benefits are long-dated and performance-dependent
    • Poor fit for short-term liquidity needs

CLATs are best viewed as substitutes for outright charitable giving, not as general-purpose tax shelters.

Comparing the Strategies Side by Side

While all three reduce ordinary income, they do so through very different mechanisms.

Simplified comparison

    • Solar: Highest potential tax efficiency, higher structural complexity
    • Oil and Gas: High deductions with fewer participation requirements, higher economic volatility
    • CLATs: Large upfront deductions tied to long-term charitable planning

Comparisons based solely on deduction size ignore durability, reversibility, and personal constraints.

How to Choose the Right Strategy for Your Situation

The correct starting point is not “Which saves the most tax?” but rather “What problem am I trying to solve?”

Decision factors often include:

    • Stability and predictability of income
    • Ability to meet participation requirements
    • Appetite for commodity and project risk
    • Charitable and legacy objectives
    • Time horizon for realizing benefits

The best ordinary income strategy is the one you would still choose if tax rates were lower.

That test often clarifies priorities quickly.

Conclusion

Solar, oil and gas, and CLATs each play a legitimate role in ordinary income tax planning. They are not interchangeable, and they are rarely additive in the same year without careful coordination.

Effective planning requires understanding not only how much tax a strategy offsets, but what it demands in return. Structure, timing, and long-term alignment matter more than any single-year outcome.

A structured planning discussion can help determine which approach fits your income profile and long-term objectives before execution becomes constrained.

General Disclosure

This material is provided for informational and educational purposes only and is based on information from sources we believe to be reliable. However, its accuracy is not guaranteed, and it is not intended to be the sole basis for investment decisions or to meet specific investment needs.

Wealthstone Group does not offer tax or legal advice. This content should not replace professional advice tailored to your individual situation.

Not an offer to buy, nor a solicitation to sell securities. All investing involves risk of loss of some or all principal invested. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Speak to your finance and/or tax professional prior to investing. Any information provided is for informational purposes only. Securities offered through Arkadios Capital, member FINRA/SIPC. Advisory Services offered through Arkadios Wealth. Wealthstone Group and Arkadios are not affiliated through any ownership.