The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) issued guidance on how to calculate Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loan amounts by business type and other issues shortly before it resumed accepting PPP applications from participating lenders Monday.
Last week’s Paycheck Protection Program and Health Care Enhancement Act, P.L. 116-139, enacted a $310 billion replenishment of the PPP program after the initial $349 billion in funding was exhausted in just 12 days. PPP loans are available to small businesses that were in operation on Feb. 15 with 500 or fewer employees, including not-for-profits, veterans’ organizations, tribal concerns, self-employed individuals, sole proprietorships, and independent contractors. Businesses with more than 500 employees in certain industries also can apply for loans, according to the SBA and Treasury.
Information issued Friday on how to calculate maximum loan amounts includes questions and answers directed toward:
- Self-employed individuals with no employees.
- Self-employed individuals with employees.
- Self-employed individuals who report income on IRS Form 1040, Schedule F, Profit or Loss From Farming.
- Partnerships.
- S corporations and C corporations.
- Eligible not-for-profit organizations.
- Eligible not-for-profit religious institutions, veterans’ organizations, and tribal businesses.
- LLC owners (whose instructions vary, depending on whether they file as a sole proprietor, partnership, or corporation).
The SBA also added questions 32–35 on Friday and question 36 on Sunday to a PPP Q&A document that first published April 3. The new Q&A guidance:
- States that the cost of a housing stipend or allowance provided to an employee as part of compensation counts toward payroll costs, subject to the $100,000 annual compensation per employee limitation.
- Explains that PPP applicants and lenders may consider the principal residence rules in Regs. Sec. 1.121-1(b)(2) when determining whether an individual employee’s principal place of residence is in the United States.
- Addresses the eligibility for PPP loans of agricultural producers, farmers, ranchers, and agricultural and other forms of cooperatives.
- Addresses whether all employees or only full-time-equivalent employees should be used to determine eligibility under the 500-employee threshold established for the PPP.
Treasury also issued additional guidance to address the needs of seasonal employers. For the purposes of calculating the maximum loan amount, seasonal employers were initially allowed to use their monthly average payroll for the Feb. 15, 2019, to June 30, 2019, period or March 1, 2019, to June 30, 2019, period. Upon further consideration, Treasury determined that many seasonal employers have seasons that are later in the year. Seasonal employers are now allowed to use an alternate base period, specifically, any consecutive 12-week period between May 1, 2019, and Sept. 15, 2019.
The AICPA’s Paycheck Protection Program Resources page houses resources and tools produced by the AICPA to help address the economic impact of the coronavirus.