Bipartisan Push for Federal Film Tax Incentives to Protect U.S. Production Jobs
March 20, 2026
California and national lawmakers say state film tax credits alone aren’t enough to keep productions competitive globally, signaling a need for a federal film incentive to safeguard American production jobs.
Senator Adam Schiff is pursuing a bipartisan push to create a competitive national incentive that would protect jobs for set designers, carpenters, lighting crews, and other production staff.
Supporters argue California’s success with incentives demonstrates a national approach is feasible and could align Hollywood with standard U.S. practice across industries.
California’s expanded film and TV tax credit program, approved by the governor, has spurred in-state production, generating billions in wages and thousands of jobs, though concerns linger about job shifts from mergers and offshoring.
In-state activity shows 16 productions taking advantage of tax incentives, totaling about $871 million in qualified spending and an expected $1.3 billion in economic impact, part of California’s broader claim of $29.1 billion in production wages and over 220,000 jobs supported.
Los Angeles film activity fell about 13% in the third quarter from the previous year, mirroring industry-wide challenges and pressures on local soundstages and employment.
The Pitt, filmed at Warner Bros. soundstages in Burbank, is cited as a beneficiary of California tax incentives, with cost reductions noted by producer Noah Wyle and plans for season three this summer.
Industry voices, including IATSE’s Matthew Loeb, stress that a globally competitive labor-based and tax incentive is essential to keeping production jobs in America.
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Los Angeles Times • Mar 20, 2026
California lawmakers aim to apply a film and TV tax credit federally - Los Angeles Times