Tax Savings Tips - June 2020
Nine Insights into
PPP Loan Forgiveness for the Self-Employed
When
you are self-employed with no employees, the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP)
is a COVID-19 gift designed to help you get through this pandemic.
If you
now have your PPP funds, we have identified nine insights for you.
1.
New Law, Enacted June 5, 2020, Creates Easier PPP Loan Forgiveness
On
Thursday, May 28, 2020, the U.S. House of Representatives approved the Paycheck Protection Program Flexibility Act of 2020 by
a vote of 417-1. On Wednesday, June 3, 2020, the Senate passed the bill by a
unanimous voice vote. The president signed the bill into law on Friday, June 5,
2020.
Here
are some highlights from this new law:
·
For
a business that currently has a PPP loan—allows the business to extend the
eight weeks to 24 weeks or elect to retain the original eight weeks
·
For
those under the 24-week rule—requires that 60 percent of the loan proceeds be
spent on payroll
·
For
new loans, changes the payback period for the (unforgiven) loan from two years
to five years, and retains the 1 percent interest rate; for existing loans,
authorizes the bank and borrower to agree to a five-year payback
·
For
those businesses under the 24-week rule—changes the workforce-in-place
requirement from June 30 to December 31
·
For
businesses under the 24-week rule—creates a new, easier path to full loan
forgiveness should the business be unable to sustain a full workforce
The
remaining insights into the eight-week rules give you (as a Schedule C
taxpayer) the runway that applies to both the eight-week and 24-week rules.
2.
Do I Have to Spend the 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 loan 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.
3.
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.
4.
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.
5.
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 any
or all of 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
·
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.
6.
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.
7.
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. 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.
8.
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.
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 there likely is money available today. If
you have not applied, do it now.
Four Insights into
the PPP for Partnerships
The PPP
free-cash program to assist businesses during the COVID-19 pandemic is gaining
traction and clarity. If you operate your business as a partnership, several
recent developments have made the free-cash program more to your benefit.
1.
Partner’s Self-Employment Income Creates Cash and Forgiveness
Just as
sole proprietors failed originally to ask for their PPP cash assistance, so did
many partners.
Three
things to note here:
1.
The
partnership (not the individual partner) applies for the PPP loan.
2.
The
deemed payroll amount that the partnership uses for the partners is their 2019
self-employment income (both guaranteed payments and ordinary income).
3.
If
the partnership filed for the PPP loan based on its employees, but failed to
include any dollar amount for the partners, the (SBA) in an interim final rule
authorizes the lender to increase the loan amount for the appropriate partners’
deemed payroll inclusion that was left out of the original application.
2.
Paid and Capped
Line 9
of the SBA official loan forgiveness application reads as below:
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.”
In
general, payments to partners don’t occur in a pattern that would equal the
amount needed during the eight-week covered period.
To protect
the partnership’s forgiveness amount, make sure that payments to partners
during the eight-week covered period equal the 8/52 of the partners’ deemed
2019 payroll. We have not seen a requirement on the “paid” part, but that word
is there. So protect yourself.
Note. The newly enacted Paycheck
Protection Program Flexibility Act of 2020 allows you to stay with the
eight-week program or elect use of the new 24-week program as explained
earlier.
3.
Qualifying Non-Payroll Expenses
When
explaining that the partnership had to file for the PPP loan and forgiveness,
the SBA stated:
Rent,
mortgage interest, utilities, and other debt service are generally incurred at
the partnership level, not partner level, so it is most natural to provide the
funds for these expenses to the partnership, not individual partners.
4.
Apply
If your
partnership has not applied for its PPP money, do it now. The SBA has plenty of
money available for PPP loans at the moment, but you have to think it won’t
last long.
Create Deductions:
Use Your Vacation Home for Business Lodging
Here’s
good news: the properly used business
vacation home or condo does not suffer from
·
the
vacation-home rules,
·
the
passive-loss rules, or
·
the
entertainment-facility rules.
In
these days of COVID-19, you may have solid reasons to use your vacation home or
condo for two purposes only, which are
·
personal
pleasure, and
·
business
lodging.
How
Business Use Escapes the Dreaded Vacation-Home Rules
Do you
use your business vacation home or condo solely
for business lodging? If so, you escape the vacation-home rules and may deduct
your business-lodging costs. The law is very clear on this. The vacation-home
section of the tax law, Section 280A(f)(4), states that nothing in the
vacation-home rules shall disallow any business deduction for business travel.
Example
1. You use your
beach home for overnight business lodging 37 times during the year. You have no
personal or rental use of the beach home. Your beach home is a 100 percent business
asset and deductible as such.
One exception to this
business-lodging rule. The
law does not grant the business-lodging exception to landlords who rent
dwelling units. If you have apartment buildings or other residential rentals,
staying at your vacation home or condo to look after your rentals does not let
you escape the unfavorable vacation-home rules.
Example
2. Fred uses his
beach home for 70 nights of business lodging and 30 nights of personal lodging.
He has a 70 percent business-use beach home and a 30 percent personal-use beach
home.
Planning
note. Fred has his
tax home where he regularly works, in New Jersey. He travels to his South
Carolina beach home location to conduct business in South Carolina. His
business activity is what makes his overnight stays at the beach home business
stays.
How
Rental Use Changes the Landscape
If you
rent the vacation home or condo, you really change the tax picture. For
example, if you use the vacation home or condo for personal, business, and
rental purposes, you could trigger
·
vacation-home
rules that require a split between the rental- and personal-use deductions;
·
vacation-home
rules that classify the rental part of your property as either a personal
residence or a rental property;
·
loss
of tax-favored hotel status for qualified rentals; and
·
passive-loss
rules that defer current tax benefits to future years.
Looking
at this list, you might ask, “How can I avoid all these additional
considerations and still rent out the vacation home or condo?” Answer: rent for
14 days or less. Technically, that works.
Build
Proof
In
addition to keeping receipts for the business condo’s expenses and
improvements, you need to prove how many nights you slept in the vacation home
or condo for both business and personal purposes.
Notations
on your business and personal calendars are helpful but not conclusive. For
your business activities, you want proof of why you had to be at the beach
home.
Example
3. Sara sells real
estate at both her tax and beach home locations. She tracks her prospects and
activities at each location.
Do as
Sara does. Also, keep your eyes open for third-party and other corroborative
evidence of use. Do you have emails, letters, and other proof of why you had to
travel to the beach home? If so, print the emails and save them along with the
written letters in your tax file.
Do you
have evidence of being in the area, such as gas, grocery, and dining receipts?
Proving use of your business condo is easy and takes very little time.
Documentation is essential. Don’t pass over this critical step.
Ownership
Do you
own the vacation home or condo in your personal name?
If so,
and you operate as a
·
proprietorship
or LLC taxed as a proprietorship, no problem. Simply treat the business
percentage as business expenses on your Schedule C.
·
corporation,
submit an expense report to the corporation to obtain reimbursement.
Why not
use a rental arrangement with your corporation? Because you are an employee who
likely uses the vacation home or condo for more than 14 days of personal use,
you want to avoid a rental arrangement that could cost you your depreciation,
repairs, and similar deductions. The reimbursement method works and creates no
complications. Use it.
If the
corporation owns the vacation home or condo, you should reimburse the
corporation for your personal use so as to avoid the monies showing on your W-2
and costing you payroll taxes.
COVID-19 Relief if
You Work Abroad or Travel to the U.S. to Work
If the
federal tax you pay is dependent on where you are physically located, then
COVID-19 likely has thrown a wrench in your physical tax location (and tax
situation).
If you
were living abroad and had to return to the U.S. because of COVID-19, you may
wonder if you’ll have a big tax bill for failing to meet the foreign earned
income exclusion requirements.
If you
are a non-resident alien who got stuck in the U.S. because of COVID-19, you may
be worried that the IRS will consider you a U.S. resident for tax
purposes—thereby allowing Uncle Sam to tax your worldwide income.
Here’s
good news. The IRS has provided relief in both circumstances if you qualify.
Foreign Earned Income
Exclusion
The tax law gives you a huge tax benefit if you live
or work abroad, which allows you to exclude a significant amount of your income
from federal tax. In 2020, the maximum exclusion is $107,600 per person plus an
additional amount for foreign housing costs.
To claim the exclusion, you need
·
foreign-sourced earned income,
·
a foreign tax home, and
·
to meet either the physical presence or the bona
fide residence test.
You’ll still be a qualified individual for the
foreign earned income exclusion if you had to leave the foreign country because
of war, civil unrest, or similar adverse conditions that precluded the normal
conduct of business.
Exclusion Relief
The IRS has ruled that COVID-19 is an adverse
condition that precluded the normal conduct of business
·
in the People’s Republic of China, excluding the
Special Administrative Regions of Hong Kong and Macau (China), as of December
1, 2019, and
·
globally, as of February 1, 2020.
To use this relief procedure, you had to
·
establish residency, or be physically present, in
the foreign country on or before the applicable date above, and
·
reasonably expect to meet the foreign earned income
exclusion requirements but for the COVID-19 pandemic.
The period covered by this relief ends on July 15,
2020.
Exclusion Relief
Example
Joe is present in the United Kingdom from January 1,
2020, through March 1, 2020, and expected to work in London for all of calendar
year 2020.
Due to COVID-19, Joe leaves the United Kingdom on
March 2, 2020, then returns on August 24, 2020, and stays for the remainder of
2020.
Joe is a qualified individual for the foreign earned
income exclusion for the following periods:
·
January 1, 2020, through March 1, 2020, and
·
August 25, 2020, through December 31, 2020.
Because
Joe has 188 qualifying days in the calendar year period, his maximum foreign
earned income exclusion in 2020 is $55,270.
U.S. Residency
If you
are a citizen or resident of the United States, then you pay federal tax on
your worldwide income.
If you
are a non-resident alien, then you pay tax only on your U.S. source income.
Therefore, if you aren’t a U.S. citizen or resident, but work occasionally in
the U.S., you don’t want to become a U.S. resident for tax purposes.
If you
are neither a U.S. citizen nor a lawful permanent resident, then you become a
U.S. resident for tax purposes for a calendar year if you meet the substantial
presence test in that calendar year.
To meet
the substantial presence test for a calendar year, you would be present in the
U.S. for at least
·
31
days in the current year, and
·
183
days over a three-year period, using the sum of days present in the current
year, one-third of the days present in the first preceding year, and one-sixth
of the days present in the second preceding year.
Therefore,
if you work in the U.S., and couldn’t leave due to COVID-19, your worldwide
income could be subject to U.S. tax.
You
don’t count certain days toward the substantial presence test, including
medical condition exception days, which are days in which you intended to leave
the U.S. but were unable to do so because of a medical condition that arose
while you were present in the U.S.
Residency Relief
If you
intended to leave the U.S. during your COVID-19 emergency period, but you were
unable to do so due to COVID-19 emergency travel disruptions, you can exclude
the COVID-19 emergency period days from the substantial presence test.
Your COVID-19
emergency period is a single period of up to 60 consecutive calendar days that
you select, starting on or after February 1, 2020, and on or before April 1,
2020, during which you were physically present in the United States for each
day.
You
qualify for this relief if
·
you
were not a U.S. resident at the close of the 2019 tax year;
·
you
are not a lawful permanent resident at any point in the 2020 tax year;
·
you
are physically present in the U.S. during your COVID-19 emergency period; and
·
you
don’t become a U.S. resident in 2020 due to days of your presence outside of
your COVID-19 emergency period.
To claim
your relief, you will either
·
have
to file a Form 1040-NR and complete a Form 8843 according to Revenue Procedure
2020-20, or
·
not
have to file a Form 1040-NR and simply retain appropriate records in case the
IRS inquires.
Residency Relief
Example
Martha
arrived in the United States on August 14, 2019, and anticipated staying for
work through March 31, 2020. With this schedule, she would not have met the
substantial presence test in either 2019 or 2020.
But due
to COVID-19, Martha did not leave the U.S. until May 26, 2020. Without relief,
Martha would be a U.S. resident in calendar year 2020 with 192 days of
presence:
·
146
days in 2020, and
·
46
days in 2019 (one-third of 139 days).
If
Martha selects April 1, 2020, as the start of her COVID-19 emergency period,
then she is not a U.S. resident in calendar year 2020 because she’ll have only 136
days of presence:
·
90
days in 2020, and
·
46
days in 2019 (one-third of 139 days).
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