On June 4, 2020, three major changes were made to the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loan forgiveness program to make it more flexible and less burdensome for borrowers to receive full loan forgiveness. These changes apply to new borrowers and those who already received their loan, and should make it easier for PPP loan recipients to have their loan completely forgiven by the Small Business Association. This added flexibility is particularly helpful for businesses that are still not fully operational.
Originally, borrowers were required to spend at least 75% of the loan on payroll costs for the loan to be fully forgiven. Payroll costs include staff wages, health insurance, retirement contributions, sick and vacation leave, and state and local taxes. Now, only 60% must be spent on payroll. To be eligible for full loan forgiveness, the remainder must still be spent on utilities, rent, and mortgage interest.
Originally, the PPP rules required borrowers to use the loan in 8 weeks to be eligible for full loan forgiveness. Borrowers now have 24 weeks to spend the PPP loan and still be eligible for full loan forgiveness.
Previously, to receive full loan forgiveness, borrowers only had until June 30th to rehire laid off or furloughed employees or fully restore reduced wages. Now, borrowers have until the end of the year. This flexibility is particularly important for businesses who will not be operating at full capacity by June 30th.
In addition, for borrowers who do not receive full loan forgiveness, the time they have to pay off the loan was extended from 2 years to 5 years.
Another key rule for loan forgiveness for the PPP was clarified by the SBA in May. To the question of whether a borrower’s PPP loan forgiveness amount will be reduced if the borrower laid off an employee, offered to rehire the same employee, but the employee declined the offer, the SBA has clearly answered “no.” The SBA and Treasury have stated they will exclude laid-off employees whom the borrower offered to rehire. To qualify for this exception, the borrower must have made a good faith, written offer of rehire, and the employee’s rejection of that offer must be documented by the borrower. Employees and employers should be aware that employees who reject offers of re-employment may forfeit eligibility for continued unemployment compensation.
In May, the SBA also clarified the timeline for forgiveness application:
Additional guidance effective May 29.