A Sept. 21 release from the Internal Revenue Service is letting Paycheck Protection Program recipients know any “improperly forgiven” PPP loans are considered taxable.
The release can be read in its entirety at https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/irs-advises-that-improperly-forgiven-paycheck-protection-program-loans-are-taxable , and a downloadable PDF file providing “guidance addressing improper forgiveness” is accessible at guidance addressing improper forgiveness of a Paycheck Protection Program loan (PPP loan)PDF.
The release says, “The guidance confirms that, when a taxpayer’s loan is forgiven based upon misrepresentations or omissions, the taxpayer is not eligible to exclude the forgiveness from income and must include in income the portion of the loan proceeds that were forgiven based upon misrepresentations or omissions.”
It also says, “Taxpayers who inappropriately received forgiveness of their PPP loans are encouraged to take steps to come into compliance by, for example, filing amended returns that include forgiven loan proceed amounts in income.”
IRS Commissioner Chuck Rettig is quoted as saying, “This action underscores the Internal Revenue Service’s commitment to ensuring that all taxpayers are paying their fair share of taxes. We want to make sure that those who are abusing such programs are held accountable, and we will be considering all available treatment and penalty streams to address the abuses.”
The release continues, “Many PPP loan recipients who received loan forgiveness were qualified and used the loan proceeds properly to pay eligible expenses. However, the IRS has discovered that some recipients who received loan forgiveness did not meet one or more eligibility conditions. These recipients received forgiveness of their PPP loan through misrepresentation or omission and either did not qualify to receive a PPP loan or misused the loan proceeds.”
The PPP loan program was established by the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) “to assist small U.S. businesses that were adversely affected by the COVID-19 pandemic in paying certain expenses. The PPP loan program was further extended by the Economic Aid to Hard-Hit Small Businesses, Nonprofits and Venues Act,” the release says.
It continues, “Under the terms of the PPP loan program, lenders can forgive the full amount of the loan if the loan recipient meets three conditions.
- “The loan recipient was eligible to receive the PPP loan. An eligible loan recipient:
- is a small business concern, independent contractor, eligible self-employed individual, sole proprietor, business concern, or a certain type of tax-exempt entity;
- was in business on or before Feb. 15, 2020; and
- had employees or independent contractors who were paid for their services, or was a self-employed individual, sole proprietor or independent contractor.
- “The loan proceeds had to be used to pay eligible expenses, such as payroll costs, rent, interest on the business’ mortgage, and utilities.
- “The loan recipient had to apply for loan forgiveness. The loan forgiveness application required a loan recipient to attest to eligibility, verify certain financial information, and meet other legal qualifications.
If the three conditions above are met, then under the PPP loan program the forgiven portion is excluded from income. If the conditions are not met, then the amount of the loan proceeds that were forgiven but do not meet the conditions must be included in income and any additional income tax must be paid.”
To report tax-related illegal activities relating to PPP loans, submit Form 3949-A, Information ReferralPDF. Taxpayers should also report instances of IRS-related phishing attempts and fraud to the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration at 800-366-4484
Another site worth visiting is Forbes, where this story about the IRS hiring 87,000 agents is posted: https://www.forbes.com/sites/robertwood/2022/08/11/irs-to-add-87000-new-agents-more-crypto-tax-enforcement/?sh=2e4807753213 .