Read this if you are an employer looking for more information on the Employee Retention Credit.
The IRS recently released Notice 2021-49, providing updated guidance on the ERC. Here are a few of the more important points from the Notice.
Timing of qualified wages deduction disallowance. The general rule is an employer's deduction for qualified wages, including qualified health plan expenses, is reduced by the amount of the employee retention credit. The new guidance indicates an employer should file an amended federal income tax return or administrative adjustment request (AAR), if applicable, for the taxable year in which the qualified wages were paid or incurred to correct any overstated deduction taken with respect to those same wages on the original federal tax return.
This means that an employer who filed an amended Form 941 in 2021 to claim the ERC for 2020 would be required to file an amended 2020 tax form to correct an overstated deduction for the credit amount if the wage/health plan deductions on the originally filed tax return for 2020 were not reduced by the amount of the credit.
Wages of majority owners and spouses. If the majority owner (owns more than 50%) of a corporation has no brother or sister (whether by whole or half blood), ancestor, or lineal descendant then neither the majority owner nor the spouse is a related individual and the wages paid to the majority owner and/or the spouse are qualified wages for purposes of the ERC, assuming the other requirements for qualified wages are satisfied. In most cases, the wages of a majority owner and spouse will not be considered qualified wages. The Notice provides a number of examples to clarify this issue, including an example where wages of a majority owner or spouse may not be treated as qualified wages.
Calculation of fulltime employees. For purposes of determining whether an eligible employer is a large eligible employer (i.e., more than 100 in 2019 for 2020 or more than 500 in 2019 for 2021) or a small eligible employer, eligible employers are not required to include fulltime equivalents when determining the average number of full-time employees. This is great news for employers with a large part-time or variable hour employee workforce.
One final note
It appears the infrastructure bill that just passed in the US Senate would eliminate the ERC for the fourth quarter of 2021. If this provision holds, it would limit the total ERC that could be claimed for 2021.
For more information
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