Dykema
  September 9, 2021 - United States of America

What Employers Need To Know About Employee Retention Credits: Rules for the Second Half of 2021 and General Clarifications
  by Michael Cumming, Asel Lindsey, Victoria Remus

Employee Retention Credits (“ERC” or “credits”) are available to eligible employers that paid qualified wages after March 12, 2020, and before January 1, 2022. Multiple pieces of legislation and Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) guidance expanded and modified the ERC rules and determination of eligibility for ERC, and computation of the credits may vary based on each individual calendar quarter in 2020 and 2021. We have previously provided a summary of the IRS guidance for 2020 and a summary of the rules applicable to the first two quarters of 2021. This alert discusses the most recent IRS guidance from August of 2021 and summarizes ERC rules applicable to the third and fourth quarters of 2021 and general clarification provided by the IRS.

ERC Claimed in Calendar Quarters 3 and 4 OF 2021

On August 4, 2021, the IRS released Notice 2021-49 (“Notice”), which amplifies prior IRS guidance and sets forth ERC rules for the third and fourth calendar quarters of 2021, which are further discussed below:

Note that the Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill (“Bill”), passed by the Senate, proposes to end the ERC program as of September 30, 2021. Thus, regardless of the IRS guidance, the future of the ERC program is not clear and would depend on the final version of the Bill passed by Congress. Since the House of Representatives is on recess until September 20, 2021, we will continue to monitor the ERC developments in the autumn.

Similar rules apply to the first two quarters of 2021, except that the threshold for the determination of a small employer versus a large employer was raised to 500 full-time employees, resulting in more ERC available for employers with fewer than 500 employees. The same rules continue to apply to the third and fourth quarters of 2021 with a few exceptions:

General ERC Clarifications

In the Notice, the IRS also provided general clarifications of the ERC rules applicable to all periods, as follows:

This very “taxpayer unfriendly” rule undermines the legislative intent of the ERC in that the credits were originally intended to help small businesses, which in most cases consist of family-owned S corporations and businesses with majority owner employees. Pursuant to this Notice, any majority owner of a business that has family members as owners, other than their spouse, will not be able to claim ERC with respect to that owner’s wages.

Gross Receipts Safe Harbor Under Rev. Proc. 2021-33

On August 10, 2021, the IRS also issued Revenue Procedure 2021-33, which provides a safe harbor permitting employers to exclude certain amounts from gross receipts for purposes of determining eligibility for the ERC. As provided by the prior guidance, for purposes of the ERC, “gross receipts” of an employer, other than a tax-exempt entity, are determined with reference to Code Section 448(c) and applicable regulations. In the case of a tax-exempt employer, “gross receipts” are determined with a reference to Code Section 6033. Generally speaking, in both cases “gross receipts” include gross amounts received from all sources. Revenue Procedure 2021-33 provides a safe harbor that permits a taxpayer to exclude the following items from “gross receipts” for purposes of determining eligibility for the ERC:

As with all other ERC requirements, employers should retain good records to support the use of the safe harbor and the amount of ERC claimed on its returns.

Set forth below is a comparison chart that highlights the differences in the ERC rules as applicable to calendar quarters in 2020 and 2021.

ERC Comparison Chart

Requirements

2020

All Quarters

2021

Quarter 1&2

2021

Quarter 3&4

Eligible Employer

Must meet gross receipts test or have suspended operations

Must meet gross receipts test or have suspended operations

Must meet gross receipts test or have suspended operations, but also see recovery startup business and severely financially distressed employer

Amount of Maximum Qualified Wages per Employee

$10,000

$10,000

$10,000

Maximum credit per Employee

50% of qualified wages or $5,000 for all calendar quarters

70% of qualified wages or $14,000 for both calendar quarters

70% of qualified wages or $14,000 for both calendar quarters

Applicable Employer’s Taxes

Employer’s portion of Social Security Tax or equivalent portion of Tier 1 tax under RRTA

Employer’s portion of Social Security Tax or equivalent portion of Tier 1 tax under RRTA

Medicare Tax or equivalent portion of Tier 1 tax under RRTA

Gross Receipts Test

Gross receipts in calendar quarter of 2020 must be less than 50% of same calendar quarter in 2019

Gross receipts in calendar quarter of 2021 must be less than 70% of same calendar quarter in 2019 or alternative quarter election

Gross receipts in calendar quarter of 2021 must be less than 70% of same calendar quarter in 2019 or alternative quarter election

Threshold for Small Employer vs Large Employer

100 full-time employees

500 full-time employees

500 full-time employees

Interaction with PPP Loan

Can claim ERC, but cannot use the same wages that were used for PPP loan forgiveness

Can claim ERC, but cannot use the same wages that were used for PPP loan forgiveness

Can claim ERC, but cannot use the same wages that were used for PPP loan forgiveness

Statute of Limitations for Audit by IRS

5 years

5 years

5 years

For more information, please contact Michael Cumming (248-203-0740 or [email protected] ), Asel Lindsey (210-554-5298 or [email protected] ) or Victoria Remus (248-203-0553 or [email protected] ), or your Dykema relationship attorney.