1. Do I Have to Spend the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) Loan Proceeds?
Yes, it appears so. The instructions for line 9 of Schedule A for the U.S. Small Business Administration’s (SBA) Form 3508 PPP forgiveness application state:
Line 9: Enter any amounts paid to owners (owner-employees, a self-employed individual, or general partners). This amount is capped at $15,385 (the eight-week equivalent of $100,000 per year) for each individual or the eight-week equivalent of their applicable compensation in 2019, whichever is lower.
Note the word “paid.”
Example. Sam shows 2019 Schedule C net profits of $100,000 and obtains a PPP loan of $20,833. By the SBA interim final rule, his payroll forgiveness amount is $15,385 based solely on his 2019 Schedule C.
Sam maintains both business and personal bank accounts. Sam deposits the $20,833 into his business account. During Sam’s eight-week covered period, he takes $15,385 out of his business account and puts it in his personal account. Presto, he has satisfied the “paid” requirement that you see on line 9 of the loan forgiveness application.
We don’t know that Sam had to satisfy the “paid” requirement of line 9, but we do know that Sam can sleep better now.
2. Should I Put the Loan Proceeds in a Separate Bank Account?
With a separate bank account from which you use the PPP loan proceeds, you can create a pretty perfect paper trail as to the use of the proceeds.
From a practical standpoint, you should be able to use your existing accounting methods to prove the use of the PPP loan proceeds. But the idea of a separate PPP account and the creation of a “pretty perfect paper trail” has much to say for itself.
3. When Do My Eight Weeks Begin?
According to the latest interim guidance and consistent with SBA Form 3508, with no employees, your eight weeks begin on the date the lender disburses the funds to you.
You would have an alternate date possibility if you had employees on a W-2 payroll.
4. Can I Claim Forgiveness for the Business Interest and Utilities Percentage I Pay for My Home Office?
Yes. When you claim the home-office deduction on your Schedule C, it reduces the net profits from your business. In other words, the home-office deduction is a business deduction.
Under the current loan forgiveness rules, your non-payroll PPP loan forgiveness amount (limited to a maximum of 25 percent of total forgiveness) may include the following during your eight-week covered period:
· interest payments on any business mortgage obligation on real or personal property where such obligation was in place before February 15, 2020 (but not any prepayment or payment of principal);
· payments on business rent obligations on real or personal property under lease agreements in force before February 15, 2020; and
· business utility payments for the distribution of electricity, gas, water, transportation, telephone, or internet access for which service began before February 15, 2020.
To put this in perspective, you need both the home (rented or owned) and the home office in place before February 15, 2020.
5. What Is a Transportation Utility?
We have not seen from the SBA or the Department of the Treasury an official definition of a “transportation utility” with respect to the PPP loan process.
The Federal Highway Administration’s Center for Innovative Finance Support says:
Transportation utility fees are a financing mechanism that treats the transportation system like a utility in which residents and businesses pay fees based on their use of the transportation system rather than taxes based on the value of property they occupy.
The definition above is what we think the SBA and the Department of the Treasury are thinking of.
6. How Does the 75 Percent Work?
When you file Schedule C and have no employees, your minimum loan forgiveness amount under the 75 percent rule is straightforward. Take your Payroll amount and divide by 0.75.
Example 4. Your PPP loan is $20,833. Your deemed Schedule C payroll to yourself is $15,385.
· Your maximum loan forgiveness amount is $15,385 divided by 0.75, or $20,513.
· Your minimum loan forgiveness amount is the 2019 Schedule C payroll component of $15,385, assuming you meet the paid rule as explained above.
Say you meet the paid rule and spend $4,000 on interest and utilities; your loan forgiveness amount is $19,385 ($15,385 + $4,000). You can let the unforgiven $1,448 ($20,833 – $19,385) continue as a 1 percent interest loan for two years from the date of the loan or you can pay it off during this time frame with no prepayment penalties.
7. What If I Have Employees?
With employees, the calculation of how you qualify for your personal portion of loan forgiveness is unchanged.
But you have to make a number of calculations to figure the forgiveness you receive because of your employees.
8. New, Easier PPP Forgiveness Coming Your Way
On Thursday, May 28, the U.S. House of Representatives approved the Paycheck Protection Program Flexibility Act of 2020 by a vote of 417-1. This bill or something similar will be enacted in June to make it easier for all PPP borrowers to qualify for PPP loan forgiveness.
Here are some highlights from this bill:
· Extends the eight weeks to 24 weeks
· Changes the 75 percent rule to 60 percent
· Changes the two years to five years and retains the 1 percent interest rate
· Changes June 30 to December 31
· Adds exemptions that will increase full-time equivalents and that will increase forgiveness amounts
· Will make it easier to obtain forgiveness when you have reductions in your employee levels
9. PPP Money Still Available; Apply Now
As of 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time on Friday, May 29, the SBA had approved 4.3 million PPP loans totaling $510.2 billion.
The Journal of Accountancy reports that a total of $138 billion remained available in PPP funding as of May 23.
That means that there is money available today. If you have not applied, do it now.
Takeaways
The PPP for the self-employed with no employees is a big deal. Unfortunately, its benefits are hidden in rules that apply to all businesses, and that creates confusion.
Reread this PPP forgiveness article, in which we explained
• that you have to spend the deemed Schedule C payroll portion of your PPP funds on yourself.
• that using a separate bank account is a best practice but not required.
• when your eight or 24 weeks begin.
• why home-office deduction percentages of mortgage interest, rent, and utilities qualify for forgiveness.
• what is a transportation utility.
• why the 75 percent (and newly enacted 60 percent) rules are not a concern when you are self- employed and have no employees.
Don’t submit your forgiveness application now if you don’t have 100 percent forgiveness. Wait. Why? You may want to elect application of the newly enacted Paycheck Protection Program Flexibility Act of 2020, the provisions of which can likely get you to 100 percent.
And one final note, there are billions left in the PPP loan pot. If you have not applied, make sure to do so now.