When Congress passed the latest COVID relief bill in December, we sent to you a detailed outline of tax provisions included in the bill that we considered favorable to your business. While there haven’t been changes made to the law since its passage, we’d like to alert you to some significant provisions we now better understand after digging deeper into the legislation.
The Economic Aid Act which passed in December rebooted the PPP, allowing for “PPP2”, as some are calling it. This second round of PPP funds is available to businesses that didn’t apply the first time, were funded inadequately (“shorted”) and haven’t already applied for forgiveness, those that returned all or part of previous PPP money, as well as businesses that previously received a PPP loan of up to $2 million, provided they certain qualifications.
For fresh PPP loans to first-time borrowers, eligible businesses include:
Round 2 PPP funds are available to previous borrowers that:
As with PPP1, the costs eligible for loan forgiveness in PPP2 include payroll, rent, covered mortgage interest, and utilities. PPP2 also makes the following potentially forgivable:
The new loan limit is $2 million (for second round; $10m if first time borrower), and the amount a small business will qualify for is determined by taking their average monthly payroll in 2019 and multiplying it by 2.5. The bill has a special calculation for restaurants and food businesses and provides those businesses a larger loan amount of 3.5 months of average monthly payroll, again subject to the $2M limit.
To be eligible for full loan forgiveness, PPP borrowers will have to spend no less than 60% of the funds on payroll over a covered period of either eight or 24 weeks — the same parameters PPP1 had when it stopped accepting applications in August.
The new COVID-19 relief bill also:
We covered these and other topics today in our webinar.
As always, if you have any questions about how these new regulations affect your business specifically, please reach out. We expect applications will be available mid-January, and we’ll continue to provide updates as we receive them.