Stimulus loan use guidance

Guidance for small businesses on using Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans and Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDLs), including how to maximize PPP loan forgiveness and document eligible expenses.

Paycheck Protection Program

  • Once you've applied for and received a PPP loan, you must use the loan to pay approved expenses over the covered period for it to be eligible for forgiveness. Borrowers may elect to choose a covered period for loan forgiveness that is between eight and 24 weeks from loan origination. Approved, forgivable expenses include:

    • Payroll costs, including:
      • salary, wages, commissions, or similar compensation (including a housing stipend or allowance, bonuses, and hazard pay);
      • wages to cover what tipped employees would normally have earned in cash tips;
      • payroll taxes imposed on an employee and required to be withheld by an employer (such as unemployment insurance premiums);
      • payment for vacation, parental, family, medical or sick leave;
      • allowance for dismissal or separation;
      • payments for the provision of group health care benefits for employees, including insurance premiums;
      • retirement contributions; and
      • payment of state or local tax assessed on the employee.
    • Business rent payments on lease agreements in force before February 15, 2020 (such as the warehouse where you store business equipment or the vehicle you use to perform your business).
    • Business utility payments (electricity, gas, water, transportation, telephone, or internet access) under service agreements dated before February 15, 2020.
    • Mortgage interest payments (but not mortgage prepayments or principal payments) on any business mortgage obligation on real or personal property (such as the interest on your mortgage for the warehouse you purchased to store business equipment or the interest on an auto loan for a vehicle you use to perform your business). Mortgages must have been signed before February 15, 2020.
    • Interest payments on any other debt obligations incurred before February 15, 2020, but it is currently unclear if those expenses are eligible for forgiveness.
    • Covered operating expenses, including payment for any software, cloud computing, and other human resources and accounting needs.
    • Uninsured costs related to property damage, vandalism or looting during 2020 public disturbances.
    • Supplier costs according to a contract, purchase order or order for goods, in effect before taking out the loan, that are essential to the borrower’s operations.
    • Worker protection expenses incurred to comply with federal or state health and safety guidelines related to COVID-19 (for example, personal protective equipment and ventilation systems).

    Payroll costs that are not eligible for loan forgiveness include:

    • Cash compensation of an individual employee in excess of an annual salary of $100,000 in one year (for eight weeks, a maximum of $15,385 per individual).
    • An employer's share of federal payroll taxes.
    • Any compensation of an employee whose principal place of residence is outside of the US.
    • Qualified sick leave wages or family leave wages for which a credit is allowed under the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA).
    • Payments to independent contractors.

Economic Injury Disaster Loan

  • You can use EIDL funds to meet financial obligations and operating expenses that your business would otherwise have been able to meet had the disaster not occurred.

For resources to help you navigate COVID-related issues generally, go to the Thomson Reuters COVID-19 Resource Center.

Last updated 4/27/2021

Additional resources

This page was created by Thomson Reuters legal and tax experts to assist your small business. For further in-depth coverage, access free COVID materials via the following Thomson Reuters platforms.

Practical Law Global Coronavirus Toolkit

A trusted resource leveraged by legal professionals and corporate counsel, Practical Law offers free access to content specific to navigating COVID-19 and business interruptions.

Checkpoint Edge COVID-19 folder

Leveraged by tax and accounting professionals, Checkpoint Edge offers free trial access to a COVID-19 folder that includes support, service, training and video tutorials.