Maximizing Your PPP Benefits and Employer Tax Credits

In 2020, Congress passed a flurry of COVID-19 related legislation designed to help employers retain and pay their employees and stay in business. This relief has been offered primarily in two forms:

  • Paycheck Protection Program (PPP): PPP loans have been made available to qualifying small businesses to help them stay afloat and retain and pay as many of their employees as possible. A business receiving a PPP loan can then apply to have the loan forgiven; that is, whatever portion of the loan was used for qualifying payroll and expenses.
  • Employer tax credits: Additional employer tax credits have been made available to help employers cover the cost of sick and family leave for employees, employees who need to care for someone with coronavirus (including a child whose school or daycare is closed due to the coronavirus), and retaining employees when operations have been partially or fully suspended due to government orders during the pandemic.

Understanding and taking full advantage of these benefits within the parameters stipulated in the legislation can be challenging for small-business owners. At SWC, we’re here to help.

In this post, we provide an overview of the COVID-19 pandemic relief programs for which your business may be eligible. When preparing your business tax returns this year, your accountant or CPA should be asking you for copies of payroll tax returns and should be initiating additional consultations with you to see if you are eligible for any of the new employer tax credits. We say should because that’s how we handle this at SWC.

Wait! Before You File Your 2020 Tax Return, Read This

Don’t rush to file your 2020 tax returns. Consult with us first for three important reasons:

  1. Both the PPP and the new employer tax credits provide potentially significant benefits for your business, and we want to make sure you reap the maximum benefit.
  2. The new employer tax credits cannot be claimed on the same payroll being used for the PPP loan forgiveness. When completing your tax return and submitting documents for PPP loan forgiveness, you need to be sure you’re not confusing the two benefits.
  3. Your state may not follow all the federal guidelines. We can help ensure that your state taxes account for any differences.

If you feel pressured to file your 2020 tax returns and are uncertain about any of the details related to the PPP or new employer tax credits, we strongly encourage you to file for an extension. With that recommendation in mind, it’s important that you take the time to consult with your tax advisor.

Sorting Out PPP Rounds 1 and 2

Congress provided two rounds of PPP loans — one in the spring of 2020 and another near the end of 2020. If you have taken advantage of the PPP, you should understand the rules and the differences between the two rounds (or “draws.”)

Important: The Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act, enacted in March 2020, was silent on whether expenses paid with the proceeds of first draw PPP loans could be deducted. The IRS took the position that these expenses were nondeductible. However, the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 (CAA, 2021), enacted at the end of 2020, provides that expenses paid from the proceeds of both first and second draw PPP loans are Continue reading… Continue reading… Continue reading…

Preparing for Your Complimentary Annual Mid-Year Meeting

By |2020-06-03T14:32:59-07:00June 3, 2020|Categories: Financial Planning|Tags: , , |0 Comments

Here at Stees, Walker & Company, LLP, we make it our responsibility to help our clients navigate the complexities of personal and business finances and maximize their tax savings, so they have more money to enjoy their lives and invest toward their financial futures. To fulfill this deeply rooted responsibility, every year at about this time, we offer our clients a complementary mid-year planning meeting. During each one-hour session, we discuss the client’s goals and any changes to their personal and/or business lives, identify ways to help them save money on taxes, answer any questions they have, and ensure that we are all working together toward the same financial goals.

Whether you’re a client of ours or another financial planning firm, you should engage in a midyear tax and financial planning session because the financial decisions and actions you take over the coming months can have a significant impact on your finances for years to come. However, very few people engage in such planning or they do so without professional guidance. As a result, we suspect that many people miss out on opportunities to reduce their taxes and have more money to invest toward their financial futures.

This year, we have a sense that more people might neglect their finances due to COVID-19. With the spring filing deadline postponed to July 15, many people are still focused on filing their 2019 tax returns. However, early preparation is key to taking advantage of future tax-saving opportunities, so we encourage you to meet with a qualified tax advisor or financial planner to explore opportunities to improve your finances.

In this post, we cover some of the recent changes in tax legislation and present a list of tax moves that you and your advisor may want to discuss.

Recent and Future Changes Likely to Impact Your Taxes

Several changes in tax legislation occurred near the end of 2019 and early in 2020 that are likely to provide tax-saving opportunities: Continue reading… Continue reading… Continue reading…

Coronavirus and Taxes Frequently Asked Questions

By |2020-03-25T16:03:41-07:00March 17, 2020|Categories: Taxes|Tags: , , |3 Comments

Updated: March 25, 2020 at 4:00 p.m. PT

In an effort to provide relief to individuals and businesses affected by coronavirus (COVID-19), the White House recently announced changes to the traditional 2020 tax filing season. Additionally, California’s state government recently announced similar relief.

With that in mind, below are answers to frequently asked questions about coronavirus and taxes, focusing both federal and California tax filings, as well as our role here at Stees, Walker & Company, LLP.

Q. What’s is Stees, Walker & Company, LLP’s role during this time?

A. Accounting firms such as ours employ personnel who have been designated by the State of California (according to Executive Order N-33-20) as part of the “essential” workforce that is needed right now. Not only are we assisting with current tax season issues for individuals and business entities, but we consider ourselves to be part of the financial front line — ready and able to assist businesses take steps now to successfully get back to work as usual when the State’s stay at home order is lifted.

Q. What is the IRS’ role in the National Emergency Concerning the Novel Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) Outbreak?

A. Under the Stafford Act, the IRS Disaster Assistance and Emergency Relief Program provides administrative tax relief to taxpayers and tax practitioners affected by a federally declared disaster in areas FEMA identifies for its Individual Assistance to Households and Families Program.

Authorized tax relief and other assistance the IRS is authorized to provide includes:

  • Extending tax return filing deadlines
  • Extending tax payment deadlines
  • Waiving penalty and interest charges normally applied to late filing and payment
  • Providing free copies of tax return transcripts
    • Tax return records are often needed to claim benefits, file insurance claims, replace lost financial records, etc.
  • Expediting amended tax returns claiming a casualty loss and refund resulting from the disaster.

Q. What accommodations has the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) made to help individual and business taxpayers during the National Emergency Concerning the Novel Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) Outbreak?

A. In addition to the IRS establishing a special section focused on steps to help taxpayers, businesses, and others affected by COVID-19 — on Friday, March 20, 2020, the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury announced that the current federal tax filing deadline has been extended from April 15, 2020 to Continue reading… Continue reading… Continue reading…

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