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Updated Guidance – Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) Tax Treatment

On November 18th, 2021, the IRS released three new revenue procedures – Rev Procs. 2021-48, 2021-49, and 2021-50 – to provide further guidance on the tax treatment of Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) amounts that are excluded from gross income as a result of loan forgiveness. This guidance was issued due to several uncertainties surrounding the tax implications of PPP loan forgiveness, including the timing/receipt of loan forgiveness, how partners/partnerships should allocate PPP forgiveness as exempt income as well as the associated deductions of expenses incurred with the funds, and the process for certain partnerships to file amended returns.

Rev. Proc. 2021-48

This statement of procedure indicates that the receipt of PPP forgiveness tax-exempt income may be treated as received or accrued when one of the following conditions is met:

Furthermore, the issue of partial forgiveness is addressed, as it pertains to adjustments that must be made on amended returns, information returns, or administrative adjustment requests for certain partnerships. These adjustments must be made for the tax year in which the taxpayer treated the forgiveness tax-exempt income as received or accrued. The Rev. Proc. also clarifies that while this tax-exempt income is excluded from taxpayers’ gross income, it must be included in gross receipts for purposes of certain Federal tax provisions (for example, the gross receipts test for determining whether a C corporation or partnership may use the cash method of accounting for tax reporting purposes)

Rev. Proc. 2021-49

This guidance is specific to partnerships and how they may allocate deductions and tax-exempt income in connection with PPP loan forgiveness among partners. Some of the provisions in this guidance are as follows:

Rev. Proc. 2021-50

Under this Rev. Proc., IRS specifies that certain eligible partnerships under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 (BBA) may file amended Forms 1065 (and provide amended Schedules K-1 to partners) on or before December 31, 2021, to adopt the guidance presented in Rev. Procs. 2021-48 and 2021-49. This allows such partnerships to avoid filing an Administrative Adjustment Request (AAR) to make the adjustments, which is generally how such partnerships are required to handle changes after a return has been filed. This may be more favorable due to administrative ease as well as other possible advantages, including faster refunds for partners (if applicable).

Timing, Timing, Timing

All this sounds crazy technical and it is! The bottom line is that these revenue procedures are very taxpayer-friendly, providing several options across years to minimize tax liability for taxpayers who obtained PPP forgiveness. There are multiple tax planning scenarios to consider, so feel free to contact us so we can go through them with you in a session customized to your situation.

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