CBS’s ‘Tracker’ is moving to LA to chase CA’s film tax incentive
βTracker,β one of TVβs most-watched shows, is uprooting its Canadian production and moving to Los Angeles.
The action drama, produced by Disneyβs 20th Television, is among a slate of new and recurring series benefiting from Californiaβs improved $750 million tax incentive program. The showβs fourth season, set to begin shooting this summer, will receive the stateβs largest tax credit , at $48 million, according to the California Film Commission.
The production will film for 176 days in California, with 250 crew members and 275 actors on board. The tax credit is based on the showβs projected spending of over $129 million. Deadline first reported the news of the showβs relocation.
The show stars actor Justin Hartley and follows his character as he tracks down people for reward money. Ever since its 2024 premiere, the show has resonated with audiences. Its third season is currently airing and was the fourth most-watched program on linear TV as of late April, according to Nielsen.
βTrackerβ is primarily set in the wilderness, making the move to California a fresh opportunity for the production to explore diverse landscapes as its backdrop. Due to the rural setting, the show is also eligible to earn an extra 5% tax credit bonus, in addition to the 35% base credit, on qualified expenditures incurred outside the designated 30-mile zone of the Greater Los Angeles area.
Before βTrackerβ secured the highest TV show tax credit, season 3 of Amazonβs βFallout,β which relocated from New York to Los Angeles, received a $42M incentive. Dan Fogelmanβs new NFL drama βThe Landβ received $42.8M. Other productions that have benefited from the tax program include medical drama βThe Pitt,β Disneyβs new animated movie βPhineas and Ferbβ and Netflixβs upcoming reboot of β13 Going on 30.β
More than 100 productions have received tax credits since the program was expanded last year in response to the continued migration of productions to other countries like Ireland, U.K. and Canada.
But film industry advocates say these efforts arenβt enough to fully revitalize U.S.-based productions and local film economies.
To that end, , U.S. Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) announced in March he is working on a bipartisan federal film incentive proposal that would be globally competitive.
βState programs cannot simply substitute for the kind of global, federal and competitive tax incentives that are needed to bring production back to American soil and stop its offshoring,β Schiff said.