On March 27, 2020 (date of enactment), the House passed and the president signed the $2.2 trillion Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act). The CARES Act marks the largest economic relief package in our nation’s history.
Much of the CARES Act involves tax and related relief for businesses and individuals. The Act provides rebates for many individual taxpayers, expands unemployment insurance coverage and provides opportunities to access retirement plan funds without penalties. On the business side, net operating loss rules are relaxed, new loan programs are available and certain payroll tax liabilities can be deferred. In addition, several revenue-raising provisions from the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) limiting business deductions are being temporarily rolled back or modified.
Small business interruption loans of up to $10 million will be available to companies and certain not-for-profit organizations with 500 or fewer employees to meet payrolls and other employee-related costs as well as debt, rent and utility payments. Eligible businesses must qualify as a “small business” as defined under the Small Business Act.
Determining the most advantageous use of the many taxpayer-friendly provisions of the CARES Act may require careful planning. For example, taxpayers who participate in the small business loan program (aka payroll interruption loans) are not allowed to use the employee retention credit. Taxpayers who have part or all of their payroll interruption loans forgiven are not eligible for the payroll tax deferral. Evaluating the most beneficial way to utilize the CARES Act requires a facts-and-circumstance analysis.
Rebate checks of $1,200 per taxpayer plus an additional $500 per dependent child will be distributed to certain taxpayers depending on the earned income, Social Security benefits and retirement income of the taxpayer as based on 2019 returns (or 2018, if a 2019 return has not yet been filed). Rebates do not extend to nonresidents, trusts, estates or anyone who can be claimed as a dependent on someone else’s return.
The federal government will supplement unemployment benefits for furloughed workers for up to four months under the “Keeping American Workers Employed and Paid” program.
Several provisions from the TCJA are altered, including:
Quarterly credits are available to employers that have experienced a full or partial suspension in their operations due to COVID-19 against certain employer payroll taxes, subject to certain restrictions.
Payment of the employer (not employee) portion of the FICA 6.2% payroll tax liability is deferred with half coming due in 2021 and remaining half due in 2022. The deferral applies to 50% of self-employment tax liability as well.
Taxpayers affected by COVID-19 can withdraw up to $100,000 from a qualified retirement plan before the end of the year, without being subject to the 10% early withdrawal penalty. In addition, a taxpayer can take a participant loan from certain retirement plans for coronavirus-related relief up to the lesser of $100,000 or 100% of the account balance.
For 2020, the required minimum distributions retirees must take from retirement plans and IRAs are suspended.
For 2020, the required minimum distributions retirees must take from 401(k) plans and IRAs are suspended.
Small business loan programs play a key role in the Act, making small business interruption loans available to companies and certain not-for-profit organizations with 500 or fewer employees. To qualify, the company or organization must fall under the parameters of “small business” determined by the Small Business Act, during the period between Feb. 15, 2020, and June 30, 2020.
The TCJA limited the amount of taxable income a net operating loss (NOL) could offset to 80%. The CARES Act restores NOL usage to pre-TCJA levels, meaning NOLs can offset 100% of taxable income for 2018, 2019 and 2020 returns. The 80% limit would apply to taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 2020. Taxpayers with NOLs that were limited to 80% of taxable income on 2018 returns should consider amending their returns to take advantage of this provision.
The TCJA also eliminated a taxpayer’s ability to carry back NOLs. The CARES Act allows NOLs from 2018 to 2020 to be carried back five years. Taxpayers with losses in those years should review prior years to determine whether to carry back their NOLs to get tax refunds. Keep in mind that the alternative minimum tax (AMT) NOL rules may still be in effect depending on the carryback year. Consequently, you may not be able to offset 100% of prior-year income for AMT purposes.
There are also special rules for real estate investment trusts (REITS), life insurance companies and those taxpayers with section 965 income inclusion amounts (U.S. shareholders paying a repatriation tax on untaxed foreign earnings).
Section 461(l), created by the TCJA, limits excess business losses of noncorporate taxpayers. Individuals with business losses from partnerships, S corporations or sole proprietorships can only offset nonbusiness income with a portion of the loss plus a threshold amount ($255,000 for single filers, $510,000 for joint filers for 2019). This provision was originally effective for taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 2017, and before Jan 1, 2026. The Act delays the effective date until 2021. This could possibly result in amended returns if you have a section 461(l) limitation in prior years.
Once section 461(l) becomes effective in 2021, wages will no longer be considered business income for purposes of this limitation. While more taxpayers will likely be subject to this limitation in the future, it will not impact their ability to obtain a refund if subject to this limitation in the past.
The TCJA limits the interest expense deduction to 30% of a taxpayer’s adjusted taxable income (ATI) plus interest income plus floor plan interest expense. The CARES Act increases the ATI limit to 50% for the 2019 and 2020 tax years. In addition, taxpayers can elect to use 2019 ATI for the calculation for their taxable year beginning in 2020. However, special rules apply to partnerships. A partnership does not get to use the increased limitation in 2019, deferring any potential benefits from the 50% threshold to 2020.
In a much longed-for technical correction to the TCJA, the CARES Act fixes the so-called “retail glitch.” Qualified improvement property (QIP) becomes 15-year property, eligible for bonus depreciation. This change is retroactive to 2018. Taxpayers that placed QIP in service in 2018 may be able to file an accounting method change (Form 3115) to “catch up” the bonus depreciation on their 2019 return. Taxpayers may also be able to amend their 2018 return to claim bonus (under the “one-year depreciable property” rule). Certain partnerships are restricted from amending returns under the centralized partnership audit regime (CPAR) rules.
The QIP change does not help real property trades or businesses that previously elected out of section 163(j). Taxpayers that made the irrevocable real property trade or business election to opt out of the business interest expense limitation must depreciate nonresidential real property, residential real property and QIP under the alternative depreciation system (ADS). ADS property is not eligible for bonus depreciation. Unless Congress changes this rule to provide retroactive relief, electing real property trades or businesses cannot take bonus on QIP. Congress may address this issue in the next round of coronavirus legislation.
The Act defers payment of the employer’s portion of the FICA 6.2% payroll tax liability. This deferral applies to wages incurred after the date of enactment through Dec. 31, 2020. Half of deferred payroll tax liability would be due by Dec. 31, 2021, with the remaining 50% due by Dec. 31, 2022. These late payments would not be subject to underpayment penalties. Again, this payroll deferral applies only to the employer, not the employee, portion of the FICA 6.2% payroll tax. Self-employed taxpayers are also allowed to take advantage of this deferral.
The CARES Act provides a quarterly credit against certain employer payroll taxes available to employers that experienced a full or partial suspension in their operations (and, in some cases, a significant decline in gross receipts) due to COVID-19. The amount of the credit is 50% of qualified wages paid or incurred from March 13, 2020, through Dec. 31, 2020, not to exceed $10,000 per quarter. For this purpose, wages are payments to employees while they are unable to work due to the operational or financial difficulties described above, subject to certain limitations.
For employers with 100 or fewer employees, qualified wages are amounts paid to employees while the employer is experiencing operational or financial difficulties described above, without considering whether all or a portion of the employees are unable to work (e.g., the business is shut down or they’re furloughed) due to these coronavirus-related difficulties. For employers with greater than 100 employees, qualified wages are limited to amounts paid to employees while they are unable to work due to coronavirus-related issues.
This credit is unavailable to employers that have received a small business interruption loan and may be limited if the employer took the credit for paid family and medical leave under the TCJA. For purposes of this credit, controlled groups are treated as one employer.
The CARES Act amends the FFCRA to make the payroll tax credits refundable for both the emergency sick leave pay and emergency Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) pay. Additionally, the CARES Act provides the two payroll tax credits may be provided in advance; the Treasury Department is instructed to provide guidance on this.
The CARES Act also amends the FFCRA to provide that an eligible employee, solely for purposes of emergency FMLA pay, includes employees who are rehired by the employer, if such employee had (1) been laid off on March 1 or a later date, and (2) worked for the employer for at least 30 days of the last 60 day prior to being laid off.
The TCJA repealed the corporate AMT but permitted unused minimum tax credits to be carried forward and refunded between 2018 and 2021. The Act allows for the unused credits to be refunded in 2018 and 2019. An election may be made to take the entire refundable credit amount in 2018. It appears that guidance will be required from Treasury if an election is made to take the entire credit in 2018.
The CARES Act expanded the threshold for corporations making charitable contributions to 25% from 10% of corporate taxable income for taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 2019. Also, the deductible threshold for contributions of food to charitable organizations that use it for the ill or needy also increased to 25% for 2020 donations.
In addition to the small business loan program described above, there is a separate $500 billion fund established under the Coronavirus Economic Stabilization Act (CESA) where the Treasury is authorized to make COVID-19 loans, loan guarantees and other investments in support of eligible businesses. Loan recipients under this program are subject to both employee and executive compensation and stock buyback restrictions, plus maintain a specified level of employment for a certain period.
Businesses taking advantage of these loan agreement provisions would be legally bound to mitigate executive compensation for one year after the loan is paid off. Generally, officers and employees making more than $3 million in 2019 will find their compensation limited to a base of $3 million, plus 50% of their 2019 compensation that was in excess of $3 million. There are also restrictions on compensation for officers and employees making more than $425,000. In other words, the CARES Act does not allow taxpayers to take out these relief loans to pay its officers and highly paid employees.
Companies receiving a government loan under CESA would be subject to a ban on stock buybacks through the term of the loan plus one additional year. Furthermore, executive bonuses are limited and employee protections must be put into place. The Treasury Department must disclose the terms of loans or other aid to companies and a new Treasury inspector general would oversee the lending program.
Businesses acquiring loans through CESA must also maintain their employment levels as of March 24, 2020, “to the extent practicable” and, in any case, cannot reduce their workforce by more than 10% of the March 24 baseline.
The Act includes a $1,200 rebate check per taxpayer plus an additional $500 per dependent child. The check will be based on 2019 returns (or 2018, if a 2019 return has not been filed by the time of determination) for taxpayers with earned income, Social Security benefits or retirement income. The rebate amount phases out beginning at $150,000 of adjusted gross income for a joint return ($75,000 for single taxpayers, $112,500 for head of household) and completely phases out at $198,000 ($99,000 for single taxpayers, $136,500 for head of household). These rebate provisions do not apply to nonresidents, estates, trusts or to anyone who can be claimed as a dependent on other taxpayer’s return.
On March 27, Treasury Sec. Steven Mnuchin said Treasury was determined to have taxpayers receive these rebates within three weeks. However, former IRS officials warn that deadline may be hard to meet. We expect taxpayers using direct deposit will receive their refunds faster, provided they have not changed bank accounts since they last filed with the IRS. For taxpayers expecting paper checks, this process is likely to take longer.
Taxpayers taking the standard deduction on their personal returns are now eligible to deduct $300 in charitable contributions for cash payments made in 2020 to authorized charitable organizations. This is considered an above-the-line deduction and is available only to taxpayers who do not itemize their deductions.
The Act provides taxpayers with additional relief by loosening restrictions on withdrawals from qualified retirement plans. Specifically, the Act waives the 10% early withdrawal penalty and allows taxpayers to (a) pay taxes on distributions ratably over three years or (b) elect to defer the tax entirely for up to three years (explained below). These provisions apply to a maximum of $100,000 of “coronavirus-related distribution,” per taxpayer.
The Act provides further flexibility by increasing the dollar amount of loans that a taxpayer can take from certain retirement plans for coronavirus-related relief by expanding the limit to the lower of $100,000 or 100% of the account balance. This increase is effective for 180 days following the date of the Act’s enactment. The Act also extends the repayment due date of outstanding loans from qualified employer plans by delaying repayment for one year if the repayment date falls before Jan. 1, 2021. For this purpose, taxpayers affected by COVID-19 include those diagnosed with the virus or whose spouse or dependent has been diagnosed, and taxpayers who have experienced adverse financial consequences as a result of being quarantined, furloughed, laid off or having work hours reduced due to the virus, or have been unable to work for lack of child care or whose employer has closed or reduced hours due to the virus.
The CARES Act provides a temporary waiver of required minimum distributions (RMDs) from certain retirement plans and IRAs. This waiver applies to distributions required to be made in calendar year 2020. In addition, the CARES Act allows amounts distributed in 2020 as RMDs to be treated as eligible rollover distributions.
Remember to visit our state tax-filing extension matrix to see if your state has extended its deadlines in response to COVID-19, and for more information to help you and your business during the COVID-19 outbreak, visit our Coronavirus Resource Center.
Small businesses eligible for forgivable bridge loans for payroll and other expenses under the CARES Act
The information provided here is of a general nature and is not intended to address the specific circumstances of any individual or entity. In specific circumstances, the services of a professional should be sought. Tax information, if any, contained in this communication was not intended or written to be used by any person for the purpose of avoiding penalties, nor should such information be construed as an opinion upon which any person may rely. The intended recipients of this communication and any attachments are not subject to any limitation on the disclosure of the tax treatment or tax structure of any transaction or matter that is the subject of this communication and any attachments.