You know the drill. You are mid underwriting, someone asks about incentives, and you open five tabs across federal, state, and local sites that do not agree with each other. Twenty minutes later you have fragments, not something you can defend. Worse, there is real value at stake. Credits, abatements, grants. Miss one and your basis is wrong. Overstate one and it comes back in IC. Due Diligence ~5 min to run Find Tax Benefits & Incentives Vic prompt Use Vic to find the tax incentives and benefits for a specific US property. Purpose Captures incentive value that would otherwise be left on the table and reduces the time required from roughly 30 minutes of manual research to about 5 minutes. Inputs Property Address Required Project Context Optional Outputs A Word memo that includes a two-sentence summary, a Top-5 ranked and dollar-sized program list, jurisdiction tables, programs reviewed but ruled out, stacking notes, and verification steps. Time saved Turns roughly 30 minutes of manual research into about 5 minutes. How it works Run the task with a property address and, if you have it, a bit of project context. Vic checks federal, state, county, and municipal programs that could apply to that property, then sizes the dollar impact for each one. The output is not a raw list. It is filtered, ranked, and written so you can use it. The run command is simple: Use Vic to find the tax incentives and benefits for a specific US property. You get a single Word memo formatted for an investment memo or board package. It opens with a tight two sentence summary that tells you what matters. Then a Top 5 list ranked by dollar value, with each program sized so you can see the order of magnitude fast. Below that, Vic lays out jurisdiction tables so you can see what comes from where. It also includes programs that were reviewed but ruled out. Most people skip this. That short list answers the inevitable question of what you might have missed and why it does not apply. Stacking notes are included where programs can be combined, and where they cannot. This is where deals gain or lose value, especially when a local abatement interacts with a state credit. Vic calls out those interactions so you are not guessing. Finally, you get clear verification steps. Incentives are only real when they are confirmed. The memo points to what needs to be checked and with whom, so the next step is obvious instead of another round of searching. The point of view is simple. Incentive work should look like underwriting, not a scavenger hunt. You should be able to drop a clean, sourced section into your IC deck without rewriting it. This task gets you there in about five minutes, and it is consistent from deal to deal. If you already do quick manual scans, this replaces them with something tighter and easier to defend. If you do not, it closes a gap that shows up later as missed value or awkward questions. Neither looks good when the numbers are on the table.