A whirlwind of legislation has been passed since the COVID-19 pandemic started in March of 2020, including the CARES Act that triggered the Employee Retention Tax Credit (ERTC). After subsequent legislation from the Consolidated Appropriations Act (CAA) and the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA), your company may be able to claim money for employees that have been on payroll, even if you received a Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loan.
For wages paid in 2020, you may be able to retroactively claim up to $5,000 per employee for 2020. This is calculated at 50% of wages paid after March 12, 2020 thru December 31, 2020 (including allocable qualified health plan expenses), capped at $5,000 for the year.
Stratus.hr Clients: claiming this retroactive 2020 tax credit will require Stratus.hr to file an amended 2020 tax return. Please contact your Stratus.hr Representative ASAP for details.
Credits for 2021 are significantly more generous for employers. Per the CAA, employers may claim up to 70% of $10,000 in wages and allocable qualified health plan expenses per employee per quarter. That equates to $7,000 per employee per quarter (capped at $14,000 for the first two quarters of 2021), or 70% of employees’ wages for those earning less than $10,000 per quarter.
(While the IRS recently released guidance on claiming employee retention tax credits through June 30, 2021, we are still awaiting further guidance for adherence to the ARPA, which extends employee retention tax credits through Q3 and Q4 of 2021.)
Do you have money you can claim through the Employee Retention Tax Credit?
To retroactively claim the employee retention credits for 2020, an eligible employer is any trade or business that:
Any 501(c) tax-exempt organization is eligible if either test is met. Self-employed organizations (partners, sole proprietors, Sub S owners) can claim credit on wages to employees, but not with respect to self-employment income.
Employers must qualify on a quarter-by-quarter basis to claim 2020 employee retention credits and maintain documentation to support their eligibility, per the IRS guidance.
Yes, company size does matter. To retroactively claim the employee retention credits for 2020:
The rules for claiming employee retention credits in 2021 are similar to 2020, except that:
Again, employers must qualify on a quarter-by-quarter basis to claim 2021 employee retention credits and maintain documentation to support their eligibility, per the IRS guidance.
Yes, company size still matters – but headcount increased per the ARPA.
While the CARES Act originally forced employers to choose between the PPP loan or the Employee Retention Credit, the CAA overturned that requirement. Now it’s possible your company could receive a PPP loan and also qualify for the employee retention credit, so long as salaries used for the latter are not included towards the PPP loan forgiveness.
This particular change is repealed retroactively, meaning you may be able to go back and receive the ERTC for wages paid in 2020 that weren’t already taken into account in your PPP loan forgiveness.
Here are several examples of companies who may have received a PPP loan and still qualify for the ERTC:
As a general rule, if you’re counting employee wages to justify forgiveness for a PPP loan, you’ll be better off allocating those wages to the PPP loan (paid at 100%) versus employee retention credits (paid at 50% up to $5,000 in 2020, and 70% up to $7,000 per quarter in 2021).
Tip: consider getting your PPP loan forgiven first and then seeing how much of the ERTC remains to be claimed after calculating items other than wages (rent, mortgage, overhead expenses, etc.). If you’re a Stratus.hr client, be sure you claim tax credits within the date ranges emailed to you to avoid incurring an amended tax return fee.
No, you cannot double dip. If you claim credits for paid sick and/or family and medical leave, you cannot claim credits for the same wages as employee retention credits – similar to a PPP loan.
Check the IRS guidance to determine alternative methods of eligibility for claiming the ERTC.
For more information, please see the video below or contact your Stratus.hr HR Representative.