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Employee Retention Tax Credit

COVID-ERC

The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act created a new employee retention tax credit for employers who closed, partially or fully, and experienced significant revenue losses resulting from COVID-19. The purpose of the tax credit is to keep workers on the payroll during the pandemic. The Employee Retention Tax Credit is an offset to payroll taxes, not an income tax credit. 

Who Is Eligible 2020:
Private employers, including non-profits, carrying on a trade or business in 2020 that:
Have operations partially or fully suspended as a result of orders from a governmental authority due to COVID-19, or
Experience a decline in gross receipts by more than 50% in a quarter compared to the same quarter in the prior year 
 
Who Is Eligible 2021:
Private employers, including non-profits, carrying on a trade or business in 2020 or 2021 that:
Have operations partially or fully suspended as a result of orders from a governmental authority due to COVID-19, or
Experience a decline in gross receipts by more than 20% in a quarter compared to previous alternative quarters in 2020 or 2019

Can an employer take both PPP and ERC?

As of December 21, 2020, and the passing of the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021, employers can take both PPP and ERC. Congress will allow employers to claim both, but not for the same dollars of payroll costs. The tax credits can be stacked for the highest benefit to the employer.

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How Much Is The Tax Credit?

$26,000 per eligible employee. Employee Retention Tax Credit (ERC) is a 70% tax credit for the first $10,000 of earnings paid each quarter between January 1, 2021, and September 30, 2021, per eligible employee. This amount can include the employer portion of health benefits. Basically, for every eligible employee during this period, an employer would receive a $7,000 tax credit per quarter, totaling $21,000 for 2021. 

 

Additionally, an employer can claim a 50% tax credit for the first $10,000 of earnings paid to an employee between March 12, 2020, and December 31, 2020. Claiming both 2020 and 2021 ERC would maximize the C-ERC for an employer at $26,000 per eligible employee.

 

How Is The Credit Taken?

The COVID ERC is applied against the employer portion of payroll taxes. The ERC is "fully refundable" because if the credit exceeds the employer's share of payroll taxes, then the excess is treated as an overpayment and refunded to the employer. 

 

Key Takeaways

 

  • ERC provides a refundable credit of up to $5,000 per eligible employee between March 12, 2020 - December 31, 2020

  • ERC provides a refundable credit of up to $21,000 per qualified employee between January 1, 2021 - September 30, 2021

  • You qualify if you were full or partially impacted or if your gross receipts fell below 50% for the same quarter in 2019 (for 2020) and below 80% (for 2021)

  • If you were not in business in 2019, you can use the corresponding quarters from 2020

  • You can claim your credit immediately by reducing payroll taxes sent to the IRS

  • If your credit exceeds payroll taxes, you will be refunded the difference from the IRS

  • If you received the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loan, you can still claim ERC for qualified wages not treated as payroll costs in obtaining forgiveness for the PPP loan

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