PPP- 2 New Rules for S and C Corporations

September 21st, 2020 at 6:43 AM

The Payroll Protection Program (PPP) rules—they keep a-changin’. 

During the past month, the Small Business Administration (SBA) issued a new set of frequently asked questions (FAQs) and a new interim final rule, which in combination create the following good news for the Payroll Protection Program (PPP): 

The new rules override prior guidance and have significance for PPP loan forgiveness today—and perhaps for obtaining additional loan monies retroactively (if Congress reinstates the PPP along with a new second round for businesses that suffered a big drop in revenue). 

Here’s one example of how the new rules benefit John, an S corporation owner. 

Example. John, the sole owner and worker, operates his business as an S corporation. His 2019 W-2 shows $140,000 in Box 1, of which $20,000 is for health insurance. In addition, the S corporation pays state unemployment taxes of $500 on John’s income and contributes $20,000 to his pension plan. 

Based on the facts in the example, the corporation is eligible for up to $25,000 of PPP loan forgiveness, as follows: 

Advantage. Prior guidance limited forgiveness to $20,833. John’s S corporation gains $4,167 in additional forgiveness thanks to the new FAQs, assuming that the S corporation’s loan amount is $25,000 or more (which is possible). 

The good news in the new guidance is that the corporate retirement contributions on behalf of owner-employees now count for additional forgiveness when the owner-employee has cash compensation greater than $100,000. And with the C corporation, the new guidance allows health insurance for the owner-employee. 

Mark S. Fineberg, CPA

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