[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 9 (Thursday, January 14, 2021)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 3692-3712]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-00451]



[[Page 3691]]

Vol. 86

Thursday,

No. 9

January 14, 2021

Part VI





Small Business Administration





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Department of the Treasury





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13 CFR Parts 113, 120, et al.





Business Loan Program Temporary Changes; Paycheck Protection Program as 
Amended by Economic Aid Act; Business Loan Program Temporary Changes; 
Paycheck Protection Program Second Draw Loans; Final Rule

  Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 9 / Thursday, January 14, 2021 / 
Rules and Regulations  

[[Page 3692]]


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SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

13 CFR Parts 113, 120, and 121

[Docket No. SBA-2021-0001]
RIN 3245-AH62

DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

RIN 1505-AC74


Business Loan Program Temporary Changes; Paycheck Protection 
Program as Amended by Economic Aid Act

AGENCY: U.S. Small Business Administration; Department of the Treasury.

ACTION: Interim final rule.

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SUMMARY: On April 2, 2020, the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) 
posted an interim final rule announcing the implementation of sections 
1102 and 1106 of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act 
(CARES Act). Section 1102 of the CARES Act temporarily adds a new 
program, titled the ``Paycheck Protection Program,'' to the SBA's 7(a) 
Loan Program. Section 1106 of the CARES Act provides for forgiveness of 
up to the full principal amount of qualifying loans guaranteed under 
the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP). The PPP is intended to provide 
economic relief to small businesses nationwide adversely impacted by 
the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19). Subsequently, SBA published 
twenty-three interim final rules providing additional guidance on the 
PPP (some of which were jointly issued with the Department of the 
Treasury) and Treasury published one interim final rule. On December 
27, 2020, the Economic Aid to Hard-Hit Small Businesses, Nonprofits, 
and Venues Act (Economic Aid Act) became law. The Economic Aid Act 
extends the authority to make PPP loans through March 31, 2021 and 
revises certain PPP requirements. This interim final rule incorporates 
the Economic Aid Act amendments required to be implemented by 
regulation within 10 days of enactment. For ease of borrower and lender 
reference, this interim final rule also consolidates the interim final 
rules (and important guidance) issued to date governing borrower 
eligibility, lender eligibility, and PPP application and origination 
requirements for new PPP loans, as well as provides general rules 
relating to loan increases and loan forgiveness. This rule is not 
intended to substantively alter or affect PPP rules that were not 
amended by the Economic Aid Act. Additional rules related to second 
draw PPP loans will be published separately, and SBA intends to issue a 
consolidated rule governing all aspects of loan forgiveness and the 
loan review process as well. This interim final rule is intended to 
govern new PPP loans made under the Economic Aid Act, as well as 
applications for loan forgiveness on existing PPP loans where the loan 
forgiveness payment has not been remitted, and should not be construed 
to alter or affect the requirements applicable to PPP loans closed 
prior to its enactment, unless the provisions apply retroactively 
consistent with specific applicability provisions of the Economic Aid 
Act as identified in this rule. In addition, in this interim final 
rule, Treasury exercises its authority under section 1109 of the CARES 
Act to allow borrowers of first draw PPP loans to use 2019 or 2020 to 
calculate their maximum loan amount.

DATES: 
    Effective date: Unless otherwise specified in this interim final 
rule, the provisions of this interim final rule are effective January 
12, 2021.
    Applicability date: This interim final rule applies to loan 
applications, including requests for increases, and applications for 
loan forgiveness submitted under the Paycheck Protection Program 
following enactment of the Economic Aid Act. This interim final rule 
also applies to loan forgiveness applications submitted under the 
Paycheck Protection Program before enactment of the Economic Aid Act 
where SBA has not remitted the forgiveness payment.
    Comment date: Comments must be received on or before February 16, 
2021.

ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by number SBA-2021-0001 
through the Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. 
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
    SBA will post all comments on www.regulations.gov. If you wish to 
submit confidential business information (CBI) as defined in the User 
Notice at www.regulations.gov, please send an email to [email protected]. 
All other comments must be submitted through the Federal eRulemaking 
Portal described above. Highlight the information that you consider to 
be CBI and explain why you believe SBA should hold this information as 
confidential. SBA will review the information and make the final 
determination whether it will publish the information.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Call Center Representative at 833-572-
0502, or the local SBA Field Office; the list of offices can be found 
at https://www.sba.gov/tools/local-assistance/districtoffices.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. Background Information

    On March 13, 2020, President Trump declared the ongoing Coronavirus 
Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic of sufficient severity and magnitude 
to warrant an emergency declaration for all states, territories, and 
the District of Columbia. With the COVID-19 emergency, many small 
businesses nationwide continue to experience economic hardship as a 
direct result of the Federal, State, and local public health measures 
that continue to be taken to minimize the public's exposure to the 
virus. In addition, based on the advice of public health officials, 
other voluntary measures continue to be observed, resulting in a 
decrease in economic activity as the public avoids malls, retail 
stores, and other businesses.
    On March 27, 2020, the President signed the Coronavirus Aid, 
Relief, and Economic Security Act (the CARES Act or the Act) (Pub. L. 
116-136) to provide emergency assistance and health care response for 
individuals, families, and businesses affected by the coronavirus 
pandemic. The Small Business Administration (SBA) received funding and 
authority through the Act to modify existing loan programs and 
establish a new loan program to assist small businesses nationwide 
adversely impacted by the COVID-19 emergency.
    Section 1102 of the CARES Act temporarily permitted SBA to 
guarantee 100 percent of 7(a) loans under a new program titled the 
``Paycheck Protection Program,'' pursuant to section 7(a)(36) of the 
Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 636(a)(36)). Section 1106 of the CARES 
Act provided for forgiveness of up to the full principal amount of 
qualifying loans guaranteed under the Paycheck Protection Program. A 
more detailed discussion of sections 1102 and 1106 of the Act is found 
in section III.
    On April 24, 2020, the President signed the Paycheck Protection 
Program and Health Care Enhancement Act (Pub. L. 116-139), which 
provided additional funding and authority for the PPP. On June 5, 2020, 
the President signed the Paycheck Protection Program Flexibility Act of 
2020 (Flexibility Act) (Pub. L. 116-142), which changed key provisions 
of the Paycheck Protection Program, including provisions relating to 
the maturity of PPP loans, the deferral of PPP loan payments, and the 
forgiveness of PPP loans. Section 3(d) of the Flexibility Act provided 
that the amendments relating to PPP loan

[[Page 3693]]

forgiveness and extension of the deferral period for PPP loans were 
effective as if included in the CARES Act, which meant that they were 
retroactive to March 27, 2020. Section 2 of the Flexibility Act 
provided that the amendment relating to the extension of the maturity 
date for PPP loans became effective on the date of enactment (June 5, 
2020). Under the Flexibility Act, the extension of the maturity date 
for PPP loans was applicable to PPP loans made on or after that date, 
and lenders and borrowers were able to mutually agree to modify PPP 
loans made before such date to reflect the longer maturity. On July 4, 
2020, Public Law 116-147 extended the authority for SBA to guarantee 
PPP loans to August 8, 2020. On December 27, 2020, the Economic Aid to 
Hard-Hit Small Businesses, Nonprofits, and Venues Act (Economic Aid 
Act) (Pub. L. 116-260) was enacted, which reauthorizes lending under 
the PPP through March 31, 2021, and among other things, modifies 
provisions related to making PPP loans and forgiveness of PPP loans, 
and authorizes second draw PPP loans under new section 7(a)(37) of the 
Small Business Act for PPP borrowers that previously received a PPP 
loan (rules for second draw loans will be published separately). The 
Economic Aid Act also redesignates section 1106 of the CARES Act as 
section 7A and transfers that section to the Small Business Act, to 
appear after section 7 of the Small Business Act.\1\
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    \1\ Because section 1106 of the CARES Act is now codified as 
section 7A of the Small Business Act, any reference to section 1106 
of the CARES Act in the rules that are being restated herein will 
refer to section 7A.
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    In addition to incorporating the changes to PPP requirements made 
by the Economic Aid Act, this interim final rule consolidates and 
restates the following interim final rules: 85 FR 20811 (posted on 
April 2, 2020 and published in the Federal Register on April 15, 2020); 
85 FR 20817 (posted on April 3, 2020 and published on April 15, 2020); 
85 FR 21747 (posted on April 14, 2020 and published on April 20, 2020); 
85 FR 23450 (posted on April 24, 2020 and published on April 28, 2020); 
85 FR 23917 (posted on April 27, 2020 and published on April 30, 2020); 
85 FR 26321 (posted on April 28, 2020 and published on May 4, 2020); 85 
FR 26324 (posted on April 30, 2020 and published on May 4, 2020); 85 FR 
27827 (posted on May 5, 2020 and published on May 8, 2020); 85 FR 29845 
(posted on May 8, 2020 and published on May 19, 2020); 85 FR 29842 
(posted on May 13, 2020 and published on May 19, 2020); 85 FR 29847 
(posted on May 14, 2020 and published on May 19, 2020); 85 FR 30835 
(posted on May 18, 2020 and published on May 21, 2020); 85 FR 31357 
(posted on May 20, 2020 and published on May 26, 2020); 85 FR 35550 
(posted on June 5, 2020 and published on June 11, 2020); 85 FR 36308 
(posted on June 11, 2020 and published on June 16, 2020); 85 FR 36717 
(posted on June 12, 2020 and published on June 18, 2020); 85 FR 36997 
(posted on June 17, 2020 and published on June 19, 2020); 85 FR 38301 
(posted on June 24, 2020 and published on June 26, 2020); and 85 FR 
39066 (posted on June 25, 2020 and published on June 30, 2020). This 
rule should be interpreted consistently with the sets of Frequently 
Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding the PPP that are posted on SBA's and 
Treasury's websites and the interim final rules posted separately 
providing guidance on second draw PPP loans and the consolidated 
guidance on loan forgiveness and the loan review process; however, the 
Economic Aid Act overrides any conflicting guidance in the FAQs, and 
SBA will be revising the FAQs to fully conform to the Economic Aid Act 
as quickly as feasible.
    Most of this document restates existing regulatory provisions to 
provide lenders and new PPP borrowers a single regulation to consult on 
borrower eligibility, lender eligibility, and loan application and 
origination requirements, as well as general rules on increases and 
loan forgiveness for PPP loans. To enhance the readability of this 
document, SBA has not reproduced the policy and legal justifications 
for existing regulatory provisions restated here, except to the extent 
that those justifications may be helpful to the borrower or lender. 
However, those justifications from the original interim final rules are 
incorporated by reference here.
    In addition, section 1109(b) of the CARES Act authorizes Treasury 
to establish criteria for certain other lenders to participate in the 
PPP. The SBA is required to administer the program that Treasury 
establishes under section 1109 of the Act, with guidance from Treasury. 
The CARES Act authorizes Treasury to issue regulations and guidance to 
implement section 1109, including regulations that establish ``terms 
and conditions'' for PPP loans. See section 1109(d)(2). The terms and 
conditions established by Treasury under section 1109 are not required 
to be identical to those provided elsewhere. Rather, the CARES Act 
allows Treasury to set terms and conditions pertaining to certain 
criteria--the maximum interest rate, maximum loan amount, and other 
specified terms--that are ``consistent,'' to ``the maximum extent 
practicable,'' with comparable terms in paragraph 36 of section 7(a) of 
the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 636(a)). See section 1109(d)(2).
    In this rulemaking, Treasury is addressing the needs of new PPP 
borrowers by allowing all new borrowers to use 2019 or 2020 for 
purposes of calculating their maximum loan amount. Section 1102 of the 
CARES Act states that borrowers are to calculate their maximum loan 
amount by using ``payroll costs incurred during the 1-year period 
before the date on which the loan is made . . . .'' For PPP loans made 
in 2020, most borrowers used 2019. The Economic Aid Act did not change 
this language for borrowers that are not farmers and ranchers and would 
require most new PPP borrowers who obtain a loan in 2021 to use 2020 as 
their base period. Using authority granted by section 1109 of the CARES 
Act, this rulemaking allows new borrowers to choose 2019 or 2020 as the 
base period, thereby ensuring that they are able to obtain funding on 
terms commensurate with existing PPP borrowers. Separately, section 313 
of the Economic Aid Act states that farmers and ranchers are to 
calculate their maximum loan amount using 2019 as their base period. 
This rulemaking allows farmers and ranchers to elect either 2019 or 
2020 as their base period, in order to ensure that they can obtain 
funding on terms commensurate with those available to other new PPP 
borrowers.
    As required by section 1109(d)(2)(B) of the CARES Act, Treasury has 
determined that providing new PPP borrowers with flexibility in 
choosing a base period is consistent, to the ``maximum extent 
practicable,'' with the terms applicable to existing PPP borrowers. 
This enhanced flexibility will help ensure that new PPP borrowers are 
treated even-handedly and do not see their permissible loan amounts 
reduced due to financial distress experienced in 2020. Other than these 
adjustments, the terms and requirements applicable to PPP loans under 
this rule are identical to the terms and requirements applicable to all 
other PPP loans. As a result, a PPP borrower that elects to use the 
flexibility in selecting a base period under this interim final rule 
may follow the same processes and procedures applicable to other PPP 
loans.

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II. Comments and Immediate Effective Date

    This interim final rule is being issued without advance notice and 
public comment because section 303 of the Economic Aid Act authorizes 
SBA to issue regulations to implement the Economic Aid Act without 
regard to notice requirements. In addition, this rule is being issued 
to allow for immediate implementation of this program. The intent of 
both the CARES Act and the Economic Aid Act is that SBA provides relief 
to America's small businesses expeditiously. Congress reauthorized PPP 
because of the current economic conditions affecting small businesses 
and intended for the loans to be made quickly. The last day to apply 
for and receive a PPP loan is March 31, 2021. Given the short duration 
of this program, and the urgent need to issue loans quickly, the 
Administrator in consultation with the Secretary has determined that it 
is impractical and not in the public interest to provide a 30-day 
delayed effective date. An immediate effective date will give small 
businesses the maximum amount of time to apply for loans and lenders 
the maximum amount of time to process applications before the program 
ends. This good cause justification also supports waiver of the 60-day 
delayed effective date for major rules under the Congressional Review 
Act at 5 U.S.C. 808(2). Although this interim final rule is effective 
immediately, comments are solicited from interested members of the 
public on all aspects of the interim final rule, including section III. 
These comments must be submitted on or before February 16, 2021. The 
SBA will consider these comments and the need for making any revisions 
as a result of these comments.

III. Paycheck Protection Program as Amended by Economic Aid Act

Overview

    The CARES Act was enacted to provide immediate assistance to 
individuals, families, and businesses affected by the COVID-19 
emergency. Among the provisions contained in the CARES Act are 
provisions authorizing SBA to temporarily guarantee loans under a new 
7(a) loan program titled the ``Paycheck Protection Program.'' Loans 
guaranteed under the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) will be 100 
percent guaranteed by SBA, and the full principal amount of the loans 
may qualify for loan forgiveness. The Economic Aid Act reauthorizes 
lending under the PPP through March 31, 2021, and revises certain PPP 
requirements. The following outlines the key provisions of the PPP 
related to eligibility of applicants for PPP loans, which lenders are 
authorized to make PPP loans, the process for making PPP loans, loan 
increases, and loan forgiveness, as revised by the Economic Aid Act. 
Additional rules related to second draw PPP loans will be published 
separately. While this interim final rule fully implements the Economic 
Aid Act's changes to loan forgiveness, SBA also intends to issue a 
consolidated rule governing all aspects of loan forgiveness and loan 
review as well to provide a single reference point for lenders and 
borrowers.

Table of Contents

A. General
B. What do borrowers need to know and do?
    1. What businesses, organizations, and individuals are eligible?
    2. What businesses, organizations, and individuals are 
ineligible?
    3. Affiliation Rules Generally
    4. I Have Determined That I Am Eligible. How much can I borrow?
    5. What is the interest rate on a PPP loan?
    6. What will be the maturity date on a PPP loan?
    7. Can I apply for more than one First Draw PPP Loan?
    8. Can I use e-signatures or e-consents if a borrower has 
multiple owners?
    9. When will I have to begin paying principal and interest on my 
PPP loan?
    10. What forms do I need and how do I submit an application for 
a PPP loan?
    11. How can PPP loans be used?
    12. What certifications need to be made?
    13. Limited Safe Harbor With Respect to Certification Concerning 
Need for PPP Loan Request
    14. Can my PPP loan be forgiven in whole or in part?
    15. Do independent contractors count as employees for purposes 
of PPP loan forgiveness?
    16. For loans made prior to December 27, 2020, what additional 
documentation must a borrower submit when the President of the 
United States, Vice President of the United States, the head of an 
Executive department, or a Member of Congress, or the spouse of any 
of the preceding, directly or indirectly holds a controlling 
interest in the borrower?
C. What do lenders need to know and do?
    1. Who is eligible to make PPP loans?
    2. Do lenders have to register in SAM.gov to make PPP loans?
    3. What do lenders have to do in terms of loan underwriting?
    4. Can lenders rely on borrower documentation for loan 
forgiveness?
    5. What fees will lenders be paid?
    6. Can PPP loans be sold into the secondary market?
    7. Do the requirements for loan pledges under 13 CFR 120.434 
apply to PPP loans pledged for borrowings from a Federal Reserve 
Bank (FRB) or advances by a Federal Home Loan Bank (FHLB)?
    8. Are lenders required to use a promissory note provided by SBA 
or may they use their own?
    9. Are lenders required to use a separate SBA Authorization 
document to issue PPP loans?
    10. By when must a lender electronically submit an SBA Form 1502 
indicating that PPP loan funds have been disbursed?
    11. How do lenders report disbursements on PPP loans that are 
approved for loan increases due to the Economic Aid Act?
D. What do both borrowers and lenders need to know and do?
    1. What are the loan terms and conditions?
    2. Do lenders have to apply the ``credit elsewhere test''?
    3. Are there any fee waivers?
    4. Who pays the fee to an agent who provides assistance in 
connection with a PPP loan?
    5. Can a borrower take multiple draws from a PPP loan and 
thereby delay the start of the covered period?
    6. If a partnership received a PPP loan that did not include any 
compensation for its partners, can the loan amount be increased to 
include partner compensation?
    7. If a seasonal employer received a PPP loan before December 
27, 2020, can the loan amount be increased based on a revised 
calculation of the maximum loan amount?
    8. Which other PPP borrowers can reapply or request an increase 
in their PPP loan amount?
    9. If a borrower's PPP loan has already been fully disbursed, 
can the lender make an additional disbursement for the increased 
loan proceeds?
    10. Are recipients of PPP loans entitled to exemptions on the 
grounds provided in Federal nondiscrimination laws for sex-specific 
admissions practices, sex-specific domestic violence shelters, 
coreligionist housing, or Indian tribal preferences in connection 
with adoption or foster care practices?

A. General

    SBA is authorized to guarantee loans under the PPP through March 
31, 2021. Congress has authorized a total program level of 
$806,450,000,000 to provide guaranteed loans under this temporary 7(a) 
program under sections 7(a)(36) (PPP loans or First Draw PPP Loans) and 
7(a)(37) (Second Draw PPP Loans) of the Small Business Act, a portion 
of which is available for new First Draw and Second Draw PPP Loans. 
Lenders have delegated authority to make PPP loans. SBA will allow 
lenders to rely on certifications of the borrower in order to determine 
eligibility of the borrower and use of loan proceeds and to rely on 
specified documents provided by the borrower to determine qualifying 
loan amount and eligibility for loan forgiveness. Lenders must comply 
with the applicable lender obligations set forth in this interim final 
rule, but will

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be held harmless for borrowers' failure to comply with program criteria 
and will not be subject to any enforcement action or penalty relating 
to loan origination or forgiveness of the PPP loan if the lender acts 
in good faith relating to the origination or forgiveness of the PPP 
loan and satisfies all other applicable Federal, State, local, and 
other statutory or regulatory requirements (as provided in section 
7A(h) of the Small Business Act, as amended). Remedies for violations 
of PPP requirements or fraud are separately addressed in this interim 
final rule. The program requirements of the PPP identified in this rule 
temporarily supersede any conflicting Loan Program Requirement (as 
defined in 13 CFR 120.10).

B. What do borrowers need to know and do?

1. What businesses, organizations, and individuals are eligible?

    a. Am I eligible? 2 3
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    \2\ See interim final rule on Second Draw PPP Loans for 
eligibility criteria for Second Draw PPP Loans, which is being 
published separately.
    \3\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.2.a. (April 15, 2020), as amended by 85 FR 36308 
(June 16, 2020), 85 FR 36717 (June 18, 2020), and 85 FR 38301 (June 
26, 2020), and has been modified to reflect subsequent rules or 
guidance and the Economic Aid Act.
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    You are eligible for a PPP loan if:
    i. You, together with any affiliates (if applicable),\4\ are:
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    \4\ See section 3 regarding the applicability of affiliation 
rules at 13 CFR 121.103 and 121.301 to PPP loans.
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     A small business concern under the applicable revenue-
based size standard established by SBA in 13 CFR 121.201 for your 
industry or under the SBA alternative size standard; \5\
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    \5\ Under SBA's alternative size standard, a business concern 
may qualify as a small business concern if it, together with any 
affiliates: (1) Has a maximum tangible net worth of not more than 
$15 million; and (2) the average net income after Federal income 
taxes (excluding any carry-over losses) for the two full fiscal 
years before the date of application is not more than $5 million.
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     an independent contractor, eligible self-employed 
individual, or sole proprietor;
     a business concern, a tax-exempt nonprofit organization 
described in section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC), a 
tax-exempt veterans organization described in section 501(c)(19) of the 
IRC, a Tribal business concern described in section 31(b)(2)(C) of the 
Small Business Act, and you employ no more than the greater of 500 
employees or, if applicable, the size standard in number of employees 
established by SBA in 13 CFR 121.201;
     a housing cooperative, an eligible section 501(c)(6) 
organization, or an eligible destination marketing organization,\6\ 
that employs no more than 300 employees;
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    \6\ See subsections 1.j., 1.k., and 1.m. for additional 
information on the eligibility of housing cooperatives, section 
501(c)(6) organizations, and destination marketing organizations. 
The applicable size standard for these entities is not more than 300 
employees.
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     a news organization that is majority owned or controlled 
by a NAICS code 511110 or 5151 business or a nonprofit public 
broadcasting entity with a trade or business under NAICS 511110 or 
5151, that employs no more than 500 employees (or, if applicable, the 
size standard in number of employees established by SBA in 13 CFR 
121.201 for your industry) per location; or
     another type of entity specifically provided for by PPP 
rules (as described below); and
    ii. you were in operation on February 15, 2020, and either had 
employees for whom you paid salaries and payroll taxes or paid 
independent contractors, as reported on a Form 1099-MISC or you were an 
eligible self-employed individual, independent contractor, or sole 
proprietorship with no employees.
    You must submit documentation sufficient to establish eligibility 
and to demonstrate the qualifying payroll amount, which may include, as 
applicable, payroll records, payroll tax filings, Form 1099-MISC, 
Schedule C or F, income and expenses from a sole proprietorship, or 
bank records.
    b. Are employees of foreign affiliates included for purposes of 
determining whether a PPP borrower has more than 500 employees (or 300 
employees, if applicable)? \7\
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    \7\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 30835, 
section III.1. (May 21, 2020) and has been modified for readability. 
Housing cooperatives, section 501(c)(6) organizations, and 
destination marketing organizations, added by the Economic Aid Act, 
must have no more than 300 employees to be eligible for PPP loans.
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    Yes. SBA's affiliation regulations provide that to determine a 
concern's size, employees of the concern ``and all of its domestic and 
foreign affiliates'' are included. 13 CFR 121.301(f). Therefore, to 
calculate the number of employees of an entity for purposes of 
determining eligibility for the PPP, an entity must include all 
employees of its domestic and foreign affiliates, except in those 
limited circumstances where the affiliation rules expressly do not 
apply to the entity.\8\ Any entity that, together with its domestic and 
foreign affiliates, does not meet the 500-employee, 300-employee,\9\ or 
other applicable PPP size standard is therefore ineligible for a PPP 
loan. Under no circumstances may PPP funds be used to support non-U.S. 
workers or operations.
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    \8\ Paragraph 7(a)(36)(D)(iv) of the Small Business Act (15 
U.S.C. 636(a)(36)(D)(iv)), as added by the CARES Act and amended by 
the Economic Aid Act, waives SBA's affiliation rules for (1) any 
business concern with not more than 500 employees that, as of the 
date on which the loan is disbursed, is assigned a North American 
Industry Classification System code beginning with 72; (2) any 
business concern operating as a franchise that is assigned a 
franchise identifier code by the Administration; (3) any business 
concern that receives financial assistance from a company licensed 
under section 301 of the Small Business Investment Act of 1958 (15 
U.S.C. 681); and (4)(a) any business concern (including any station 
which broadcasts pursuant to a license granted by the Federal 
Communications Commission under title III of the Communications Act 
of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 301 et seq.) without regard for whether such a 
station is a concern as defined in section 121.105 of title 13, Code 
of Federal Regulations, or any successor thereto) that employs not 
more than 500 employees, or the size standard established by the 
Administrator for the North American Industry Classification System 
code applicable to the business concern, per physical location of 
such business concern and is majority owned or controlled by a 
business concern that is assigned a North American Industry 
Classification System code beginning with 511110 or 5151; or (b) any 
nonprofit organization that is assigned a North American Industry 
Classification System code beginning with 5151. SBA also applies 
affiliation exceptions to certain categories of entities. 13 CFR 
121.103(b).
    \9\ For housing cooperatives, section 501(c)(6) organizations, 
and destination marketing organizations, the applicable size 
standard is not more than 300 employees. See subsections 1.j. and 
1.m. For the applicable size standard for entities eligible to apply 
for Second Draw PPP Loans, see the interim final rule on Second Draw 
PPP Loans that is being published separately.
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    c. I have income from self-employment and file a Form 1040, 
Schedule C. Am I eligible for a PPP Loan? \10\
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    \10\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 21747, 
subsection III.1.a. (April 20, 2020) and has been modified to 
reflect subsequent interim final rules or guidance and the Economic 
Aid Act.
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    You are eligible for a PPP loan if: (i) You were in operation on 
February 15, 2020; (ii) you are an individual with self-employment 
income (such as an independent contractor or a sole proprietor); (iii) 
your principal place of residence is in the United States; and (iv) you 
filed or will file a Form 1040 Schedule C for 2019 or meet the 
requirements below. However, if you are a partner in a partnership, you 
may not submit a separate PPP loan application for yourself as a self-
employed individual. Instead, the self-employment income of general 
active partners may be reported as a payroll cost, up to $100,000 on an 
annualized basis, as prorated for the period during which the payments 
are made or the obligation to make the payments is incurred on a PPP 
loan application filed by or on behalf of the partnership. Partnerships 
are eligible for PPP loans under the CARES Act, as amended by the 
Economic Aid Act, and the Administrator has determined, in consultation 
with the Secretary of the

[[Page 3696]]

Treasury (Secretary), that limiting a partnership and its partners (and 
an LLC filing taxes as a partnership) to one PPP loan is necessary to 
help ensure that as many eligible borrowers as possible obtain PPP 
loans before the statutory deadline of March 31, 2021. This limitation 
will allow lenders to more quickly process applications and lower the 
burdens of applying for partnerships/partners. The Administrator has 
further determined that permitting partners to apply as self-employed 
individuals would create unnecessary confusion regarding which entity, 
the partner or the partnership, applies for partner and LLC member 
income, and would generate loan proceeds use coordination and 
allocation issues. Rent, mortgage interest, utilities, other debt 
service, operations expenditures, property damage costs, supplier 
costs, and worker protection expenditures are generally incurred at the 
partnership level, not partner level, so it is most natural to provide 
the funds for these expenses to the partnership, not individual 
partners. In addition, you should be aware that participation in the 
PPP may affect your eligibility for state-administered unemployment 
compensation or unemployment assistance programs, including the 
programs authorized by Title II, Subtitle A of the CARES Act, or CARES 
Act Employee Retention Credits. On June 26, 2020, SBA issued additional 
guidance for those individuals with self-employment income who: (i) 
Were not in operation in 2019 but who were in operation on February 15, 
2020, and (ii) filed a Form 1040 Schedule C for 2020. See ``How To 
Calculate Maximum Loan Amounts--By Business Type,'' Question 10 posted 
on SBA's website.\11\
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    \11\ https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/2020-12/How-to-Calculate-Loan-Amounts-508_6-26-20.pdf (April 20, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    d. Are eligible businesses owned by directors or shareholders of a 
PPP lender permitted to apply for a PPP loan through the lender with 
which they are associated? \12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \12\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 21747, 
subsection III.2.a. (April 20, 2020) and has been modified for 
readability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    SBA regulations (including 13 CFR 120.110 and 120.140) shall not 
apply to prohibit an otherwise eligible business owned (in whole or 
part) by an outside director or holder of a less than 30 percent equity 
interest in a PPP lender from obtaining a PPP loan from the PPP lender 
on whose board the director serves or in which the equity owner holds 
an interest, provided that the eligible business owned by the director 
or equity holder follows the same process as any similarly situated 
customer or account holder of the lender. Favoritism by the lender in 
processing time or prioritization of the director's or equity holder's 
PPP application is prohibited. Lenders should comply with all other 
applicable state and federal regulations concerning loans to associates 
of the lender. Lenders should also consult their own internal policies 
concerning lending to individuals or entities associated with the 
lender.
    The foregoing paragraph does not apply to a director or owner who 
is also an officer or key employee of the PPP Lender. Officers and key 
employees of a PPP Lender may obtain a PPP Loan from a different 
lender, but not from the PPP Lender with which they are associated. SBA 
also reminds Lenders that the ``Authorized Lender Official'' for each 
PPP Loan is subject to the limitations described in the PPP Lender 
Application Form (SBA Form 2484), which states in relevant part: 
``Neither the undersigned Authorized Lender Official, nor such 
individual's spouse or children, has a financial interest in the 
Applicant [Borrower].''
    e. If a seasonal business was dormant or not fully operating as of 
February 15, 2020, is it still eligible? \13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \13\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 23917, 
subsection III.4. (April 30, 2020) and has been modified to reflect 
the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes, in evaluating eligibility, a seasonal business will be 
considered to have been in operation as of February 15, 2020, if the 
business was in operation for any 12-week period between February 15, 
2019 and February 15, 2020. This approach aligns the eligibility 
criteria for seasonal businesses being in operation with the time 
period for calculation of a seasonal employer's maximum loan amount 
from section 336 of the Economic Aid Act and makes PPP loans available 
to seasonal businesses that operate outside of the original, more 
limited time frame.
    f. How does the 500 employee limit apply to news organizations with 
more than one physical location? \14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \14\ This subsection has been added to conform to section 317 of 
the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    A business concern, or any station which broadcasts pursuant to a 
license granted by the Federal Communications Commission under title 
III of the Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 301 et seq.), with 
more than one physical location that employs not more than 500 
employees (or the size standard established by the Administrator for 
the NAICS code applicable to the business concern) per physical 
location, is eligible for a PPP loan if it: (1) Is majority owned or 
controlled by a business concern that is assigned a NAICS code 
beginning with 511110 or 5151 or, with respect to a public broadcasting 
entity (as defined in section 397(11) of the Communications Act of 1934 
(47 U.S.C. 397(11))), has a trade or business that falls under such a 
code; and (2) makes a good faith certification that proceeds of the 
loan will be used to support expenses at the component of the 
organization that produces or distributes locally focused or emergency 
information. See section 3 for the applicability of SBA's affiliation 
rules to news organizations.
    g. Industry-Specific Eligibility Issues
    i. Is a hospital owned by governmental entities eligible for a PPP 
loan? \15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \15\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 23450, 
subsection III.2.c. (April 28, 2020) and has been modified for 
readability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Notwithstanding 13 CFR 120.110(j), a hospital that is otherwise 
eligible to receive a PPP loan as a business concern or nonprofit 
organization (described in section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue 
Code of 1986 and exempt from taxation under section 501(a) of such 
Code) shall not be rendered ineligible for a PPP loan due to ownership 
by a state or local government if the hospital receives less than 50% 
of its funding from state or local government sources, exclusive of 
Medicaid.
    ii. Are businesses that receive revenue from legal gaming eligible 
for a PPP Loan? \16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \16\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 23450, 
subsection III.2.d. (April 28, 2020) and has been modified for 
readability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    A business that is otherwise eligible for a PPP Loan is not 
rendered ineligible due to its receipt of legal gaming revenues, and 13 
CFR 120.110(g) is inapplicable to PPP loans. Businesses that received 
illegal gaming revenue remain categorically ineligible.
    iii. Are electric cooperatives that are exempt from Federal income 
taxation under section 501(c)(12) of the Internal Revenue Code eligible 
for a PPP loan? \17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \17\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 29847, 
subsection III.1. (May 19, 2020) and has been modified for 
readability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes. An electric cooperative that is exempt from Federal income 
taxation under section 501(c)(12) of the Internal Revenue Code will be 
considered to be ``a business entity organized for profit'' for 
purposes of 13 CFR 121.105(a)(1). As a result, such entities are 
eligible PPP borrowers, as long as other eligibility requirements are 
met. To be eligible, an electric cooperative must satisfy the employee-
based size standard established in the CARES Act, SBA's employee-based 
size standard

[[Page 3697]]

corresponding to its primary industry, if higher, or both tests in 
SBA's ``alternative size standard.'' \18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \18\ Under the alternative size standard, a business concern, 
including an electric cooperative, can qualify for the PPP as a 
small business concern if, as of March 27, 2020: (1) The maximum 
tangible net worth of the business was not more than $15 million; 
and (2) the average net income after Federal income taxes (excluding 
any carry-over losses) of the business for the two full fiscal years 
before the date of the application is not more than $5 million. For 
an electric cooperative that does not have net income, the 
cooperative's savings distributed to its owner-members will be 
considered its net income.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    iv. Are telephone cooperatives that are exempt from federal income 
taxation under section 501(c)(12) of the Internal Revenue Code eligible 
for a PPP loan? \19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \19\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 35550, 
subsection III.1. (June 11, 2020) and has been modified for 
readability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes. A telephone cooperative that is exempt from federal income 
taxation under section 501(c)(12) of the Internal Revenue Code will be 
considered to be ``a business entity organized for profit'' for 
purposes of 13 CFR 121.105(a)(1). As a result, such entities are 
eligible PPP borrowers, as long as other eligibility requirements are 
met. To be eligible, a telephone cooperative must satisfy the employee-
based size standard established in the CARES Act, SBA's employee-based 
size standard corresponding to its primary industry, if higher, or both 
tests in SBA's ``alternative size standard.'' \20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \20\ Under the alternative size standard, a business concern, 
including a telephone cooperative, can qualify for the PPP as a 
small business concern if, as of March 27, 2020: (1) The maximum 
tangible net worth of the business was not more than $15 million; 
and (2) the average net income after Federal income taxes (excluding 
any carry-over losses) of the business for the two full fiscal years 
before the date of the application is not more than $5 million. For 
a telephone cooperative that does not have net income, the telephone 
cooperative's capital credits distributed to its owner-members will 
be considered its net income.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    v. Are housing cooperatives as defined in section 216(b) of the 
Internal Revenue Code eligible for PPP loans? \21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \21\ This subsection has been added to conform to section 316 of 
the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes. Housing cooperatives (as defined in section 216(b) of the 
Internal Revenue Code of 1986) that employ not more than 300 employees 
are eligible to apply for PPP loans as long as other eligibility 
requirements are met. In addition, the provisions applicable to 
affiliation, described in section 3, apply to housing cooperatives in 
the same manner as with respect to a small business concern.
    vi. Are nonprofit and tax-exempt news organizations eligible for 
PPP loans? \22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \22\ This subsection has been added to conform to section 317 of 
the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes. A public broadcasting entity (as defined in section 397(11) of 
the Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 397(11)) that is a nonprofit 
organization or any organization otherwise subject to section 
511(a)(2)(B) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and employs no more 
than 500 employees (or, if applicable, the size standard in number of 
employees established by SBA in 13 CFR 121.201 for the entity's 
industry) per location is eligible for a PPP loan if the organization 
has a trade or business that is assigned a NAICS code beginning with 
511110 or 5151, and makes a good faith certification that proceeds of 
the loan will be used to support expenses at the component of the 
organization that produces or distributes locally focused or emergency 
information.\23\ See subsection B.1.f. for information on how the 500 
employee limit applies to news organizations with more than one 
physical location. See section 3 for the applicability of SBA's 
affiliation rules to news organizations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \23\ This subsection provides that an eligible nonprofit news 
organization under section 317 of the Economic Aid Act must have no 
more than 500 employees. (For those nonprofit news organizations 
with more than one physical location, they must have no more than 
500 employees per location.) This will make PPP loans available to 
nonprofit news organizations, regardless of whether the organization 
would be a business concern under SBA regulations, if the nonprofit 
news organization satisfies the same general size standard 
applicable under the PPP rules to other borrowers that are nonprofit 
or tax-exempt organizations. The Administrator, in consultation with 
the Secretary, has determined this requirement appropriately 
implements section 317 of the Economic Aid Act by making PPP loans 
available to nonprofit news organizations on the same terms as other 
nonprofit organizations that have been made eligible for PPP loans.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    vii. Are destination marketing organizations eligible for PPP 
loans? \24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \24\ This subsection has been added to conform to section 318 of 
the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes. Under the Economic Aid Act, any destination marketing 
organization \25\ is eligible to receive a PPP loan as long as other 
eligibility requirements are met and if: (1) The destination marketing 
organization does not receive more than 15 percent of its receipts from 
lobbying activities; (2) the lobbying activities of the destination 
marketing organization do not comprise more than 15 percent of the 
total activities of the organization; (3) the cost of the lobbying 
activities of the destination marketing organization did not exceed 
$1,000,000 during the most recent tax year of the destination marketing 
organization that ended prior to February 15, 2020; (4) the destination 
marketing organization employs not more than 300 employees; and (5) the 
destination marketing organization: (a) Is described in section 501(c) 
of the Internal Revenue Code and is exempt from taxation under section 
501(a) of such Code; or (b) is a quasi-governmental entity or is a 
political subdivision of a State or local government, including any 
instrumentality of those entities.\26\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \25\ Section 318 of the Economic Aid Act added the following 
definition to paragraph 7(a)(36)(A) of the Small Business Act (15 
U.S.C. 636(a)(36)(A)): ``(xv) the term 'destination marketing 
organization' means a nonprofit entity that is--(I) an organization 
described in section 501(c) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 and 
exempt from tax under section 501(a) of such Code; or (II) a State, 
or a political subdivision of a State (including any instrumentality 
of such entities)--(aa) engaged in marketing and promoting 
communities and facilities to businesses and leisure travelers 
through a range of activities, including--(AA) assisting with the 
location of meeting and convention sites; (BB) providing travel 
information on area attractions, lodging accommodations, and 
restaurants; (CC) providing maps; and (DD) organizing group tours of 
local historical, recreational, and cultural attractions; or (bb) 
that is engaged in, and derives the majority of the operating budget 
of the entity from revenue attributable to, providing live events.
    \26\ A destination marketing organization that is a quasi-
governmental entity or is a political subdivision of a State or 
local government, including any instrumentality of those entities, 
is eligible for a PPP loan notwithstanding the SBA regulation at 13 
CFR 120.110(j), which states that government-owned entities (except 
for businesses owned or controlled by a Native American tribe) are 
not eligible for SBA financial assistance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    viii. Are 501(c)(6) organizations eligible for PPP loans? \27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \27\ This subsection has been added to conform to section 318 of 
the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes. Any organization that is described in section 501(c)(6) of the 
Internal Revenue Code and that is exempt from taxation under section 
501(a) of such Code (excluding professional sports leagues and 
organizations with the purpose of promoting or participating in a 
political campaign or other activity) shall be eligible to receive a 
PPP loan as long as other eligibility requirements are met and if: (1) 
The organization does not receive more than 15 percent of its receipts 
from lobbying activities; (2) the lobbying activities of the 
organization do not comprise more than 15 percent of the total 
activities of the organization; (3) the cost of the lobbying activities 
of the organization did not exceed $1,000,000 during the most recent 
tax year of the organization that ended prior to February 15, 2020; and 
(4) the organization employs not more than 300 employees.

2. What businesses, organizations, and individuals are ineligible?

    a. Could I be ineligible even if I meet the eligibility 
requirements in section 1? \28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \28\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.2.a. (April 15, 2020), as amended by 85 FR 36308 
(June 16, 2020), 85 FR 36717 (June 18, 2020), and 85 FR 38301 (June 
26, 2020), and has been modified to conform to subsequent interim 
final rules or guidance and the Economic Aid Act and for 
readability.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 3698]]

    You are ineligible for a PPP loan if, for example:
    i. You are engaged in any activity that is illegal under Federal, 
state, or local law;
    ii. You are a household employer (individuals who employ household 
employees such as nannies or housekeepers);
    iii. An owner of 20 percent or more of the equity of the applicant 
is presently incarcerated or, for any felony, presently subject to an 
indictment, criminal information, arraignment, or other means by which 
formal criminal charges are brought in any jurisdiction; or has been 
convicted of, pleaded guilty or nolo contendere to, or commenced any 
form of parole or probation (including probation before judgment) for, 
a felony involving fraud, bribery, embezzlement, or a false statement 
in a loan application or an application for federal financial 
assistance within the last five years or any other felony within the 
last year;
    iv. You, or any business owned or controlled by you or any of your 
owners, has ever obtained a direct or guaranteed loan from SBA or any 
other Federal agency that is currently delinquent or has defaulted 
within the last seven years and caused a loss to the government;
    v. Your business or organization was not in operation on February 
15, 2020; \29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \29\ Added to conform to section 310 of the Economic Aid Act. 
This provision is effective as if included in the CARES Act and 
applies to any loan made pursuant to section 7(a)(36) of the Small 
Business Act before, on, or after December 27, 2020, including 
forgiveness of such a loan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    vi. You or your business received or will receive a grant under the 
Shuttered Venue Operator Grant program under section 324 of the 
Economic Aid Act; \30\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \30\ Added to conform to section 310 of the Economic Aid Act. 
This provision applies to PPP loans made on or after December 27, 
2020.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    vii. The President, the Vice President, the head of an Executive 
Department, or a Member of Congress, or the spouse of such person as 
determined under applicable common law, directly or indirectly holds a 
controlling interest in your business; \31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \31\ Added to conform to section 322 of the Economic Aid Act. 
This provision applies to any loan made on or after December 27, 
2020. For any loan made under section 7(a)(36) to a covered entity 
before December 27, 2020, see subsection B.16 of this interim final 
rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    viii. Your business is an issuer, the securities of which are 
listed on an exchange registered as a national securities exchange 
under section 6 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78f) 
\32\ (SBA will not consider whether a news organization that is 
eligible under the conditions described in subsection 1.f. and 1.g.vi. 
is affiliated with an entity, which includes any entity that owns or 
controls such news organization, that is an issuer \33\); or
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \32\ Added to conform to section 342 of the Economic Aid Act, 
which also added the following definitions to paragraph 7(a)(36)(A) 
of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 636(a)(36)(A)): ``(xvi) the 
terms `exchange', `issuer', and `security' have the meanings given 
those terms in section 3(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 
(15 U.S.C. 78c(a)).'' This provision applies to loans made on or 
after December 27, 2020.
    \33\ See section 317 of the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    ix. Your business has permanently closed.\34\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \34\ This provision prohibits an entity that has gone out of 
business and has no intention of reopening from receiving a PPP 
loan. The Administrator, in consultation with the Secretary, has 
determined this provision is necessary to maintain program 
integrity, prevent abuse, and prevent PPP loans being made to 
businesses that have permanently closed. Preserving funds for 
businesses in operation is necessary because only businesses that 
are still in operation will retain employees, which is a primary 
purposes of the PPP. PPP was not intended to support businesses that 
have permanently closed. A borrower that has temporarily closed or 
temporarily suspended its business but intends to reopen remains 
eligible for a PPP loan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    b. Are businesses that are generally ineligible for 7(a) loans 
under 13 CFR 120.110 eligible for a PPP loan? \35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \35\ This subsection replaces the subsection originally 
published at 85 FR 20811, subsection III.2.c. (``How do I determine 
if I am ineligible'') (April 15, 2020) and modified to conform to 
the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Paragraphs (a), (g), and (k), of 13 CFR 120.110 do not apply to PPP 
loans. For PPP loans, the ineligibility restriction in 13 CFR 
120.110(n) is superseded by subsection B.2.a.iii. of this interim final 
rule. Otherwise, a business is not eligible for a PPP loan if it is a 
type of business concern (or would be, if the entity were a business 
concern) described in 13 CFR 120.110, except as permitted by 
subsections B.1.d and B.1.g of this rule or otherwise permitted by PPP 
rules. Businesses that are not generally eligible for a 7(a) loan under 
13 CFR 120.110 are described further in SBA's Standard Operating 
Procedure (SOP) 50 10 6, Part 2, Section A, Chapter 3.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \36\ SOP 50 10 6 can be found at https://www.sba.gov/document/sop-50-10-lender-development-company-loan-programs-0. For PPP loans 
approved before December 27, 2020, see SOP 50 10 5(K), Subpart B, 
Chapter 2 for ineligible types of businesses. SOP 50 10 5(K) can be 
found at https://www.sba.gov/document/sop-50-10-5-lender-development-company-loan-programs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    c. Will I be approved for a PPP loan if my business is in 
bankruptcy? \37\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \37\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 23450, 
subsection III.4. (April 28, 2020) and has been modified for 
readability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    No. If the applicant or the owner of the applicant is the debtor in 
a bankruptcy proceeding, either at the time it submits the application 
or at any time before the loan is disbursed, the applicant is 
ineligible to receive a PPP loan. If the applicant or the owner of the 
applicant becomes the debtor in a bankruptcy proceeding after 
submitting a PPP application but before the loan is disbursed, it is 
the applicant's obligation to notify the lender and request 
cancellation of the application. Failure by the applicant to do so will 
be regarded as a use of PPP funds for unauthorized purposes.
    The Borrower Application Form for PPP loans (SBA Form 2483), which 
reflects this restriction in the form of a borrower certification, is a 
loan program requirement. Lenders may rely on an applicant's 
representation concerning the applicant's or an owner of the 
applicant's involvement in a bankruptcy proceeding.
    d. Is a hedge fund or private equity firm eligible for a PPP loan? 
\38\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \38\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 23450, 
subsection III.2.a. (April 28, 2020) and has been modified for 
readability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    No. Hedge funds and private equity firms are primarily engaged in 
investment or speculation, and such businesses are therefore ineligible 
to receive a PPP loan.

3. Affiliation Rules Generally

    a. Are affiliates considered together for purposes of determining 
eligibility? \39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \39\ The text of this subsection was originally published at 85 
FR 20817 (April 15, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In most cases, a borrower will be considered together with its 
affiliates for purposes of determining eligibility for the PPP.\40\ 
Under SBA rules, entities

[[Page 3699]]

may be considered affiliates based on factors including but not limited 
to stock ownership, overlapping management,\41\ and identity of 
interest. See 13 CFR 121.301(f).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \40\ Paragraph 7(a)(36)(D)(iv) of the Small Business Act (15 
U.S.C. 636(a)(36)(D)(iv), as added by the CARES Act and amended by 
the Economic Aid Act, waives the affiliation rules contained in 
Sec.  121.103 for (1) any business concern with not more than 500 
employees that, as of the date on which the loan is disbursed, is 
assigned a North American Industry Classification System code 
beginning with 72; (2) any business concern operating as a franchise 
that is assigned a franchise identifier code by the Administration; 
(3) any business concern that receives financial assistance from a 
company licensed under section 301 of the Small Business Investment 
Act of 1958 (15 U.S.C. 681); and (4)(a) any business concern 
(including any station which broadcasts pursuant to a license 
granted by the Federal Communications Commission under title III of 
the Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 301 et seq.) without 
regard for whether such a station is a concern as defined in section 
121.105 of title 13, Code of Federal Regulations, or any successor 
thereto) that employs not more than 500 employees, or the size 
standard established by the Administrator for the North American 
Industry Classification System code applicable to the business 
concern, per physical location of such business concern and is 
majority owned or controlled by a business concern that is assigned 
a North American Industry Classification System code beginning with 
511110 or 5151; or (b) any nonprofit organization that is assigned a 
North American Industry Classification System code beginning with 
5151. This interim final rule has no effect on these statutory 
waivers, which remain in full force and effect. As a result, the 
affiliation rules contained in section 121.301 also do not apply to 
these types of entities. In addition, paragraph 7(a)(36)(D) of the 
Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 636(a)(36)(D)), as amended by section 
342 of the Economic Aid Act states that, with respect to a business 
concern made eligible under paragraph 7(a)(36)(D)(iii)(II) or 
(iv)(IV) (certain news organizations), the Administrator shall not 
consider whether any affiliated entity, which for purposes of this 
subclause shall include any entity that owns or controls such 
business concern, is an issuer.
    \41\ In order to help potential borrowers identify other 
businesses with which they may be deemed to be affiliated under the 
common management standard, the Borrower Application Form, SBA Form 
2483, released on April 2, 2020, requires applicants to list other 
businesses with which they have common management (including under a 
management agreement). The information supplied by the applicant in 
response to that information request should be used by applicants as 
they assess whether they have affiliates that should be included in 
their number of employees reported on SBA Form 2483.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    b. How do SBA's affiliation rules affect my eligibility and apply 
to me under the PPP? \42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \42\ The text of this subsection was originally published at 85 
FR 20817 (April 15, 2020) and has been modified to conform to the 
Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    An entity generally is eligible for the PPP if it, combined with 
its affiliates, (i) is a small business as defined in section 3 of the 
Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 632), (ii)(1) has 500 or fewer employees 
\43\ or is a business that operates in a certain industry and meets 
applicable SBA employee-based size standards for that industry, if 
higher, and (2) is a tax-exempt nonprofit organization described in 
section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC), a housing 
cooperative, a tax-exempt veterans organization described in section 
501(c)(19) of the IRC, a Tribal business concern described in section 
31(b)(2)(C) of the Small Business Act, a section 501(c)(6) 
organization, a destination marketing organization, or any other 
business concern, or (iii) has 500 or fewer employees per location (or 
an applicable SBA employee-based size standard for that industry, if 
higher) and is either majority owned or controlled by a NAICS code 
511110 or 5151 business or is a nonprofit public broadcasting entity 
with a trade or business under NAICS code 511110 or 5151. Prior to the 
CARES Act, the nonprofit organizations listed above were not eligible 
for SBA Business Loan Programs under section 7(a) of the Small Business 
Act; only for-profit small business concerns were eligible. The CARES 
Act made such nonprofit organizations not only eligible for the PPP, 
but also subjected them to SBA's affiliation rules. As amended, section 
7(a) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 636(a)) now provides that the 
provisions applicable to affiliations under 13 CFR 121.103 apply with 
respect to nonprofit organizations, housing cooperatives, and veterans 
organizations in the same manner as with respect to small business 
concerns. However, the detailed affiliation standards contained in 
Sec.  121.103 currently do not apply to PPP borrowers, because Sec.  
121.103(a)(8) provides that applicants in SBA's Business Loan Programs 
(which include the PPP) are subject to the affiliation rules contained 
in 13 CFR 121.301.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \43\ For housing cooperatives, section 501(c)(6) organizations, 
and destination marketing organizations, the applicable size 
standard is not more than 300 employees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    c. Faith-Based Organizations \44\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \44\ The text of this subsection was originally published at 85 
FR 20817 (April 15, 2020) and has been modified for readability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    This rule exempts otherwise qualified faith-based organizations 
from the SBA's affiliation rules, including those set forth in 13 CFR 
part 121, where the application of the affiliation rules would 
substantially burden those organizations' religious exercise. For the 
reasons described in 85 FR 20817, the SBA's affiliation rules, 
including those set forth in 13 CFR part 121, do not apply to the 
relationship of any church, convention or association of churches, or 
other faith-based organization or entity to any other person, group, 
organization, or entity that is based on a sincere religious teaching 
or belief or otherwise constitutes a part of the exercise of religion. 
This includes any relationship to a parent or subsidiary and other 
applicable aspects of organizational structure or form. A faith-based 
organization seeking loans under this program may rely on a reasonable, 
good faith interpretation in determining whether its relationship to 
any other person, group, organization, or entity is exempt from the 
affiliation rules under this provision, and SBA will not assess, and 
will not require participating lenders to assess, the reasonableness of 
the faith-based organization's determination.
    d. Do the SBA affiliation rules prohibit a portfolio company of a 
private equity fund from being eligible for a PPP loan? \45\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \45\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 23450, 
subsection III.2.b. (April 28, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Borrowers must apply the affiliation rules that appear in 13 CFR 
121.301(f), as set forth in the Second PPP Interim Final Rule (85 FR 
20817). The affiliation rules apply to private equity-owned businesses 
in the same manner as any other business subject to outside ownership 
or control.\46\ However, in addition to applying any applicable 
affiliation rules, all borrowers should carefully review the required 
certification on the Paycheck Protection Program Borrower Application 
Form (SBA Form 2483) stating that ``[c]urrent economic uncertainty 
makes this loan request necessary to support the ongoing operations of 
the Applicant.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \46\ However, the CARES Act waives the affiliation rules if the 
borrower receives financial assistance from an SBA-licensed Small 
Business Investment Company (SBIC) in any amount. This includes any 
type of financing listed in 13 CFR 107.50, such as loans, debt with 
equity features, equity, and guarantees. Affiliation is waived even 
if the borrower has investment from other non-SBIC investors.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    e. Does participation in an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) 
trigger application of the affiliation rules? \47\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \47\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 23450, 
section III.3. (April 28, 2020) and has been modified for 
readability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    No. For purposes of the PPP, a business's participation in an ESOP 
(as defined in 15 U.S.C. 632(q)(6)) does not result in an affiliation 
between the business and the ESOP.

4. I Have Determined That I Am Eligible. How much can I borrow? 
48
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \48\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.2.d. (April 15, 2020) and has been modified to 
conform to additional interim final rules or guidance and the 
Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Under the PPP, the maximum loan amount for First Draw PPP Loans is 
the lesser of $10 million or an amount that you will calculate using a 
payroll-based formula authorized by the Act, as explained below.\49\ 
PPP loans approved in 2020 used 2019 or the 1-year before the date on 
which the loan is made to calculate payroll costs for purposes of 
calculating the maximum loan amount. Borrowers who apply for PPP loans 
2021 and who are not self-employed (including sole proprietorships and 
independent contractors) are also permitted to use the precise 1-year 
period before the date on which the loan is made to calculate payroll 
costs if they choose not to use 2019 or 2020. Since most borrowers will 
use 2019 or 2020 the rule text refers only to 2019 or 2020 for 
simplicity and readability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \49\ See subsection 4.d. for maximum loan amount applicable to 
certain farmers and ranchers. For the maximum loan amount for Second 
Draw PPP Loans, see the the interim final rule on Second Draw PPP 
Loans that is being published separately.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 3700]]

    a. How do I calculate the maximum amount I can borrow? \50\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \50\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.2.d. (April 15, 2020) and has been modified to 
conform to additional rules or guidance and the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The following methodology, which is one of the methodologies 
authorized by the Act, will be most useful for many applicants.
    i. Step 1: Aggregate payroll costs (defined in detail below in 
subsections 4.g. and 4.h.) from 2019 or 2020 for employees whose 
principal place of residence is the United States.
    ii. Step 2: Subtract any compensation paid to an employee in excess 
of $100,000 on an annualized basis, as prorated for the period during 
which the payments are made or the obligation to make the payments is 
incurred.\51\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \51\ See subsection 4.j for treatment of amounts paid to 
independent contractors.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    iii. Step 3: Calculate average monthly payroll costs (divide the 
amount from Step 2 by 12).
    iv. Step 4: Multiply the average monthly payroll costs from Step 3 
by 2.5.
    v. Step 5: Add the outstanding amount of an Economic Injury 
Disaster Loan (EIDL) made between January 31, 2020 and April 3, 2020 
that you seek to refinance. Do not include the amount of any 
``advance'' under an EIDL COVID-19 loan (because it does not have to be 
repaid).
    The examples below illustrate this methodology.

i. Example 1--No employees make more than $100,000
    Annual payroll: $120,000
    Average monthly payroll: $10,000
    Multiply by 2.5 = $25,000
    Maximum loan amount is $25,000
ii. Example 2--Some employees make more than $100,000
    Annual payroll: $1,500,000
    Subtract compensation amounts in excess of an annual salary of 
$100,000: $1,200,000
    Average monthly qualifying payroll: $100,000
    Multiply by 2.5 = $250,000
    Maximum loan amount is $250,000
iii. Example 3--No employees make more than $100,000, outstanding EIDL 
loan of $10,000.
    Annual payroll: $120,000
    Average monthly payroll: $10,000
    Multiply by 2.5 = $25,000
    Add EIDL loan of $10,000 = $35,000
    Maximum loan amount is $35,000
iv. Example 4--Some employees make more than $100,000, outstanding EIDL 
loan of $10,000
    Annual payroll: $1,500,000
    Subtract compensation amounts in excess of an annual salary of 
$100,000: $1,200,000
    Average monthly qualifying payroll: $100,000
    Multiply by 2.5 = $250,000
    Add EIDL loan of $10,000 = $260,000
    Maximum loan amount is $260,000

    You must provide your Form 941 (or other tax forms containing 
similar information) and state quarterly wage unemployment insurance 
tax reporting forms from each quarter in 2019 or 2020 (whichever you 
used to calculate loan amount), or equivalent payroll processor 
records, along with evidence of any retirement and health insurance 
contributions. A payroll statement or similar documentation from the 
pay period that covered February 15, 2020 must be provided to establish 
you were in operation on February 15, 2020.\52\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \52\ This subsection clarifies the documentation that must be 
submitted with an applicant's loan application to substantiate the 
borrower's payroll costs. This requirement applies to loans made 
after December 27, 2020. For documentation requirements for PPP 
loans made before December 27, 2020, see 85 FR 20811, subsection 
III.1.e. (April 15, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    b. I have income from self-employment and file a Form 1040, 
Schedule C, how do I calculate the maximum amount I can borrow and what 
documentation is required?\53\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \53\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 21747, 
subsection III.1.b. (April 20, 2020) and has been modified to 
conform to additional rules or guidance and the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    How you calculate your maximum loan amount depends upon whether or 
not you employ other individuals. If you have no employees, the 
following methodology should be used to calculate your maximum loan 
amount:
    i. Step 1: Find your 2019 or 2020 IRS Form 1040 Schedule C line 31 
net profit amount (if you are using 2020 to calculate payroll costs and 
have not yet filed a 2020 return, fill it out and compute the value). 
If this amount is over $100,000, reduce it to $100,000. If this amount 
is zero or less, you are not eligible for a PPP loan.
    ii. Step 2: Calculate the average monthly net profit amount (divide 
the amount from Step 1 by 12).
    iii. Step 3: Multiply the average monthly net profit amount from 
Step 2 by 2.5.
    iv. Step 4: Add the outstanding amount of any Economic Injury 
Disaster Loan (EIDL) made between January 31, 2020 and April 3, 2020 
that you seek to refinance. Do not include the amount of any advance 
under an EIDL COVID-19 loan (because it does not have to be repaid).
    You must provide the 2019 or 2020 (whichever you used to calculate 
loan amount) Form 1040 Schedule C with your PPP loan application to 
substantiate the applied-for PPP loan amount and a 2019 or 2020 
(whichever you used to calculate loan amount) IRS Form 1099-MISC 
detailing nonemployee compensation received (box 7), invoice, bank 
statement, or book of record that establishes you are self-employed. If 
using 2020 to calculate loan amount, this is required regardless of 
whether you have filed a 2020 tax return with the IRS. You must provide 
a 2020 invoice, bank statement, or book of record to establish you were 
in operation on or around February 15, 2020.
    If you have employees, the following methodology should be used to 
calculate your maximum loan amount:
    i. Step 1: Compute 2019 or 2020 payroll (using the same year for 
all items) by adding the following:
    a. Your 2019 or 2020 Form 1040 Schedule C line 31 net profit amount 
(if you are using 2020 and have not yet filed a 2020 return, fill it 
out and compute the value), up to $100,000 on an annualized basis, as 
prorated for the period during which the payments are made or the 
obligation to make the payments is incurred, if this amount is over 
$100,000, reduce it to $100,000, if this amount is less than zero, set 
this amount at zero;
    b. 2019 or 2020 gross wages and tips paid to your employees whose 
principal place of residence is in the United States computed using 
2019 or 2020 IRS Form 941 Taxable Medicare wages & tips (line 5c--
column 1) from each quarter plus any pre-tax employee contributions for 
health insurance or other fringe benefits excluded from Taxable 
Medicare wages & tips; subtract any amounts paid to any individual 
employee in excess of $100,000 on an annualized basis, as prorated for 
the period during which the payments are made or the obligation to make 
the payments is incurred and any amounts paid to any employee whose 
principal place of residence is outside the United States; and
    c. 2019 or 2020 employer contributions to employee group health, 
life, disability, vision and dental insurance (portion of IRS Form 1040 
Schedule C line 14 attributable to those contributions); retirement 
contributions (Form 1040 Schedule C line 19), and state and local taxes 
assessed on employee compensation (primarily under state laws commonly 
referred to as the State Unemployment Tax Act or SUTA from state 
quarterly wage reporting forms).
    ii. Step 2: Calculate the average monthly amount (divide the amount 
from Step 1 by 12).

[[Page 3701]]

    iii. Step 3: Multiply the average monthly amount from Step 2 by 
2.5.
    iv. Step 4: Add the outstanding amount of any EIDL made between 
January 31, 2020 and April 3, 2020 that you seek to refinance. Do not 
include the amount of any advance under an EIDL COVID-19 loan (because 
it does not have to be repaid).
    You must supply your 2019 or 2020 (whichever you used to calculate 
loan amount) Form 1040 Schedule C, Form 941 (or other tax forms or 
equivalent payroll processor records containing similar information) 
and state quarterly wage unemployment insurance tax reporting forms 
from each quarter in 2019 or 2020 (whichever you used to calculate loan 
amount) or equivalent payroll processor records, along with evidence of 
any retirement and health insurance contributions, if applicable. A 
payroll statement or similar documentation from the pay period that 
covered February 15, 2020 must be provided to establish you were in 
operation on February 15, 2020.
    c. How does a seasonal employer calculate the maximum PPP loan 
amount? \54\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \54\ This subsection has been added to conform to section 336 of 
the Economic Aid Act. Except for loans made pursuant to section 
7(a)(36) of the Small Business Act for which SBA has remitted a loan 
forgiveness payment to the lender before December 27, 2020, it is 
effective as if included in the CARES Act and applies to any loan 
made before, on, or after December 27, 2020, including forgiveness 
of such a loan. Previous guidance issued for seasonal employers 
stated as follows: ``Under section 1102 of the CARES Act, a seasonal 
employer may determine its maximum loan amount for purposes of the 
PPP by reference to the employer' average total monthly payments for 
payroll `the 12-week period beginning February 15, 2019, or at the 
election of the eligible [borrower], March 1, 2019, and ending June 
30, 2019.' Under this interim final rule issued pursuant to section 
1109 of the Act, a seasonal employer may alternatively elect to 
determine its maximum loan amount as the average total monthly 
payments for payroll during any consecutive 12-week period between 
May 1, 2019 and September 15, 2019.'' 85 FR 23917 (April 30, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As defined by section 315 of the Economic Aid Act, a borrower is a 
seasonal employer if it does not operate for more than 7 months in any 
calendar year or, during the preceding calendar year, it had gross 
receipts for any 6 months of that year that were not more than 33.33 
percent of the gross receipts for the other 6 months of that year. 
Under section 336 of the Economic Aid Act, a seasonal employer must 
determine its maximum loan amount for purposes of the PPP by using the 
employer's average total monthly payments for payroll for any 12-week 
period selected by the seasonal employer beginning February 15, 2019, 
and ending February 15, 2020.
    d. How do farmers and ranchers calculate the maximum PPP loan 
amount? \55\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \55\ This subsection has been added to conform to section 313 of 
the Economic Aid Act. This provision applies to a farmer or rancher 
who (1) operates as a sole proprietorship, an independent 
contractor, or is an eligible self-employed individual; (2) reports 
farm income or expenses on a Schedule F (or any equivalent successor 
schedule); and (3) was in business as of February 15, 2020. This 
provision is effective as if included in the CARES Act and applies 
to any loan made before, on, or after December 27, 2020, unless SBA 
has remitted a loan forgiveness payment to the lender on the PPP 
loan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    How you calculate your maximum loan amount depends upon whether you 
employ other individuals. If you have no employees, the following 
methodology should be used to calculate your maximum loan amount:
    i. Step 1: Find your 2019 or 2020 IRS Form 1040 Schedule F line 9 
gross income (if you are using 2020 and you have not yet filed a 2020 
return, fill it out and compute the value). If this amount is over 
$100,000, reduce it to $100,000. If this amount is zero or less, you 
are not eligible for a PPP loan.
    ii. Step 2: Divide the amount from Step 1 by 12.
    iii. Step 3: Multiply the average monthly gross income amount from 
Step 2 by 2.5.
    iv. Step 4: Add the outstanding amount of any Economic Injury 
Disaster Loan (EIDL) made between January 31, 2020 and ending on April 
3, 2020 that you seek to refinance. Do not include the amount of any 
advance under an EIDL COVID-19 loan (because it does not have to be 
repaid).
    You must provide the 2019 or 2020 (whichever you used to calculate 
loan amount) Form 1040 Schedule F with your PPP loan application to 
substantiate the applied-for PPP loan amount and a 2019 or 2020 
(whichever you used to calculate loan amount) IRS Form 1099-MISC 
detailing nonemployee compensation received (box 7), invoice, bank 
statement, or book of record that establishes you are self-employed. 
You must provide a 2020 invoice, bank statement, or book of record to 
establish you were in operation on or around February 15, 2020.
    If you have employees, the following methodology should be used to 
calculate your maximum loan amount:
    i. Step 1: Compute 2019 or 2020 payroll (using the same year for 
all items) by adding the following:
    a. The difference between your 2019 or 2020 Form 1040 Schedule F 
line 9 gross income amount (if you are using 2020 and you have not yet 
filed a 2020 return, fill it out and compute the value), and the sum of 
Schedule F lines 15, 22 and 23, up to $100,000 on an annualized basis, 
as prorated for the period during which the payments are made or the 
obligation to make the payments is incurred, if this amount is over 
$100,000, reduce it to $100,000, if this amount is less than zero, set 
this amount at zero; \56\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \56\ Any employee payroll costs should be subtracted from the 
farmer's or rancher's gross income to avoid double-counting amounts 
that represent pay to the employees of the farmer or rancher.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    b. 2019 or 2020 gross wages and tips paid to your employees whose 
principal place of residence is in the United States computed using 
2019 or 2020 IRS Form 941 Taxable Medicare wages & tips (line 5c--
column 1) from each quarter plus any pre-tax employee contributions for 
health insurance or other fringe benefits excluded from Taxable 
Medicare wages & tips; subtract any amounts paid to any individual 
employee in excess of $100,000 on an annualized basis, as prorated for 
the period during which the payments are made or the obligation to make 
the payments is incurred and any amounts paid to any employee whose 
principal place of residence is outside the United States; and
    c. 2019 or 2020 employer contributions for employee group health, 
life, disability, vision and dental insurance (portion of IRS Form 1040 
Schedule F line 15 attributable to those contributions), employer 
contributions for employee retirement contributions (Form 1040 Schedule 
F line 23, and state and local taxes assessed on employers for employee 
compensation (primarily under state laws commonly referred to as the 
State Unemployment Tax Act or SUTA from state quarterly wage reporting 
forms).
    ii. Step 2: Calculate the average monthly amount (divide the amount 
from Step 1 by 12).
    iii. Step 3: Multiply the average monthly amount from Step 2 by 
2.5.
    iv. Step 4: Add the outstanding amount of any EIDL made between 
January 31, 2020 and April 3, 2020 that you seek to refinance. Do not 
include the amount of any advance under an EIDL COVID-19 loan (because 
it does not have to be repaid).
    You must supply your 2019 or 2020 (whichever you used to calculate 
loan amount) Form 1040 Schedule F, Form 941 (or other tax forms or 
equivalent payroll processor records containing similar information) 
and state quarterly wage unemployment insurance tax reporting forms 
from each quarter in 2019 or 2020 (whichever you used to calculate loan 
amount) or equivalent

[[Page 3702]]

payroll processor records, along with evidence of any retirement and 
health insurance contributions, if applicable. A payroll statement or 
similar documentation from the pay period that covered February 15, 
2020 must be provided to establish you were in operation on February 
15, 2020.
    A farmer or rancher who received a PPP loan before December 27, 
2020 may request a recalculation of the maximum loan amount based on 
the formula described above regarding gross income, if doing so would 
result in a larger covered loan amount and may receive an increase in 
its PPP loan based on the recalculation.
    e. How do partnerships calculate the maximum loan amount?
    The following methodology should be used to calculate the maximum 
amount that partnerships can borrow:
    (i) Step 1: Compute 2019 or 2020 payroll (using the same year for 
all items) by adding (1) net earnings from self-employment of 
individual general partners in 2019 or 2020, as reported on IRS Form 
1065 K-1, reduced by section 179 expense deduction claimed, 
unreimbursed partnership expenses claimed, and depletion claimed on oil 
and gas properties, multiplied by 0.9235,\57\ that is not more than 
$100,000 per partner; (2) 2019 or 2020 gross wages and tips paid to 
your employees whose principal place of residence is in the United 
States, if any, which can be computed using 2019 or 2020 IRS Form 941 
Taxable Medicare wages and tips (line 5c--column 1) from each quarter 
plus any pre-tax employee contributions for health insurance or other 
fringe benefits excluded from Taxable Medicare wages and tips, 
subtracting any amounts paid to any individual employee in excess of 
$100,000 and any amounts paid to any employee whose principal place of 
residence is outside the U.S.; (3) 2019 or 2020 employer contributions 
for employee group health, life, disability, vision and dental 
insurance, if any (portion of IRS Form 1065 line 19 attributable to 
those contributions); (4) 2019 or 2020 employer contributions to 
employee retirement plans, if any (IRS Form 1065 line 18); and (5) 2019 
or 2020 employer state and local taxes assessed on employee 
compensation, primarily state unemployment insurance tax (from state 
quarterly wage reporting forms), if any.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \57\ This treatment follows the computation of self-employment 
tax from IRS Form 1040 Schedule SE Section A line 4 and removes the 
``employer'' share of self-employment tax, consistent with how 
payroll costs for employees in the partnership are determined.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (ii) Step 2: Calculate the average monthly payroll costs (divide 
the amount from Step 1 by 12).
    (iii) Step 3: Multiply the average monthly payroll costs from Step 
2 by 2.5.
    (iv) Step 4: Add any outstanding amount of any EIDL made between 
January 31, 2020 and April 3, 2020 that you seek to refinance. Do not 
include the amount of any advance under an EIDL COVID-19 loan (because 
it does not have to be repaid).
    You must supply 2019 or 2020 (whichever you used to calculate loan 
amount) IRS Form 1065 (including K-1s) and other relevant supporting 
documentation if the partnership has employees, including the 2019 or 
2020 (whichever you used to calculate loan amount) IRS Form 941 and 
state quarterly wage unemployment insurance tax reporting form from 
each quarter (or equivalent payroll processor records or IRS Wage and 
Tax Statements) along with records of any retirement or health 
insurance contributions. If the partnership has employees, a payroll 
statement or similar documentation from the pay period that covered 
February 15, 2020 must be provided to establish the partnership was in 
operation and had employees on that date. If the partnership has no 
employees, an invoice, bank statement, or book of record establishing 
the partnership was in operation on February 15, 2020 must instead be 
provided.
    f. Can a single corporate group receive unlimited PPP loans? \58\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \58\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 26324, 
subsection III.1. (May 4, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    No. To preserve the limited resources available to the PPP program, 
and in light of the previous lapse of PPP appropriations and the high 
demand for PPP loans, businesses that are part of a single corporate 
group shall in no event receive more than $20,000,000 of PPP loans in 
the aggregate.\59\ For purposes of this limit, businesses are part of a 
single corporate group if they are majority owned, directly or 
indirectly, by a common parent.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \59\ The Administrator has authority to issue ``such rules and 
regulations as [the Administrator] deems necessary to carry out the 
authority vested in [her] by or pursuant to'' 15 U.S.C. Chapter 14A, 
including authorities established under section 1102 of the CARES 
Act. Section 1102 provides that the Administrator ``may'' guarantee 
loans under the terms and conditions set forth in section 7(a) of 
the Small Business Act, and those conditions specify a ``maximum''--
but not a minimum--loan amount. See 15 U.S.C. 636(a)(36)(B), (E); 
see also CARES Act section 1106(k) (authorizing SBA to issue 
regulations to govern loan forgiveness). To preserve finite 
appropriations for PPP loans and ensure broad access for eligible 
borrowers, the Administrator, in consultation with the Secretary, 
has determined that an aggregate limitation on loans to a single 
corporate group is necessary and appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    It is the responsibility of an applicant for a PPP loan to notify 
the lender if the applicant has applied for or received PPP loans in 
excess of the amount permitted by this interim final rule and withdraw 
or request cancellation of any pending PPP loan application or approved 
PPP loan not in compliance with the limitation set forth in this rule. 
Failure by the applicant to do so will be regarded as a use of PPP 
funds for unauthorized purposes, and the loan will not be eligible for 
forgiveness. A lender may rely on an applicant's representation 
concerning the applicant's compliance with this limitation.
    The Administrator, in consultation with the Secretary, determined 
that limiting the amount of PPP loans that a single corporate group may 
receive will promote the availability of PPP loans to the largest 
possible number of borrowers, consistent with the CARES Act. The 
Administrator has concluded that a limitation of $20,000,000 strikes an 
appropriate balance between broad availability of PPP loans and program 
resource constraints.
    SBA's affiliation rules, which relate to an applicant's eligibility 
for PPP loans, and any waiver of those rules under the CARES Act, 
continue to apply independent of this limitation. Businesses are 
subject to this limitation even if the businesses are eligible for the 
waiver-of-affiliation provision under the CARES Act or are otherwise 
not considered to be affiliates under SBA's affiliation rules.\60\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \60\ See Section 7(a)(36)(D)(iv) of the Small Business Act (15 
U.S.C. 636(a)(36)(D)(iv), as added by the CARES Act; 13 CFR 
121.103(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    This rule has no effect on lender obligations required to obtain an 
SBA guarantee for PPP loans.
    g. What qualifies as ``payroll costs? '' \61\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \61\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.2.f. (April 15, 2020) and has been modified to 
conform to the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Payroll costs consist of compensation to employees (whose principal 
place of residence is the United States) in the form of salary, wages, 
commissions, or similar compensation; cash tips or the equivalent 
(based on employer records of past tips or, in the absence of such 
records, a reasonable, good-faith employer estimate of such tips); 
payment for vacation, parental, family, medical, or sick leave; 
allowance for separation or dismissal; payment for the provision of 
employee benefits consisting of group health care or group life, 
disability, vision, or dental

[[Page 3703]]

insurance,\62\ including insurance premiums, and retirement; payment of 
state and local taxes assessed on compensation of employees; and for an 
independent contractor or sole proprietor, wages, commissions, income, 
or net earnings from self-employment, or similar compensation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \62\ This provision has been modified to conform to section 308 
of the Economic Aid Act. This revision is effective as if included 
in the CARES Act and applies to any loan made before, on, or after 
December 27, 2020, including forgiveness of such a loan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    h. Is there anything that is expressly excluded from the definition 
of payroll costs? \63\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \63\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.2.g. (April 15, 2020) and has been modified to 
conform to section 344 the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes. The Act expressly excludes the following:
    i. Any compensation of an employee whose principal place of 
residence is outside of the United States;
    ii. The compensation of an individual employee in excess of 
$100,000 on an annualized basis, as prorated for the period during 
which the payments are made or the obligation to make the payments is 
incurred;
    iii. Federal employment taxes imposed or withheld during the 
applicable period, including the employee's and employer's share of 
FICA (Federal Insurance Contributions Act) and Railroad Retirement Act 
taxes, and income taxes required to be withheld from employees; and
    iv. Qualified sick and family leave wages for which a credit is 
allowed under sections 7001 and 7003 of the Families First Coronavirus 
Response Act (Pub. L. 116-127).
    i. May fishing boat owners include payroll costs in their PPP loan 
applications that are attributable to crewmembers described in section 
3121(b)(20) of the Internal Revenue Code? \64\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \64\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 39066, 
subsection III.1. (June 30, 2020) and has been modified to conform 
to section 344 the Economic Aid Act and for readability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes. A fishing boat owner may include compensation reported on Box 
5 of IRS Form 1099-MISC and paid to a crewmember described in section 
3121(b)(20) of the Code, up to $100,000 on an annualized basis, as 
prorated for the period during which the payments are made or the 
obligation to make the payments is incurred, as a payroll cost in its 
PPP loan application.
    j. Do independent contractors count as employees for purposes of 
PPP loan calculations? \65\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \65\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.2.h. (April 15, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    No, independent contractors have the ability to apply for a PPP 
loan on their own so they do not count for purposes of a borrower's PPP 
loan calculation.\66\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \66\ See subsection 4.i. regarding fishing boat owners including 
payroll costs for their crewmembers in the calculation of the PPP 
loan amount.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    k. Do student workers count when determining the number of 
employees for PPP loan eligibility? \67\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \67\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 27287, 
section III.2. (May 8, 2020) and has been modified for readability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes. Student workers generally count as employees, unless (a) the 
applicant is an institution of higher education, as defined in the 
Department of Education's Federal Work-Study regulations, 34 CFR 675.2, 
and (b) the student worker's services are performed as part of a 
Federal Work-Study Program (as defined in those regulations \68\) or a 
substantially similar program of a State or political subdivision 
thereof. Institutions of higher education must exclude work study 
students when determining the number of employees for PPP loan 
eligibility, and must also exclude payroll costs for work study 
students from the calculation of payroll costs used to determine their 
PPP loan amount.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \68\ The Department of Education's Federal Work-Study Programs 
described at 34 CFR part 675 are (1) the Federal Work-Study Program, 
(2) the Job Location and Development Program, and (3) Work Colleges 
Program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

5. What is the interest rate on a PPP loan? 69
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \69\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.2.i. (April 15, 2020) and has been modified to 
conform to additional interim final rules or guidance and the 
Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The interest rate will be 100 basis points or one percent, 
calculated on a non-compounding, non-adjustable basis.\70\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \70\ Revised to conform to section 339 of the Economic Aid Act. 
The revision applies to PPP loans made on or after December 27, 
2020, but may apply with respect to a PPP loan made before that date 
upon the mutual agreement of the lender and the borrower. A one 
percent interest rate provides low cost funds to borrowers to meet 
eligible payroll costs and other eligible expenses during this 
temporary period of economic dislocation caused by the coronavirus. 
Second, for lenders, the 100 basis points offers an attractive 
interest rate relative to the cost of funding for comparable 
maturities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

6. What will be the maturity date on a PPP loan? 71
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \71\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 36308, 
subsection III.1.b. (June 16, 2020) and has been modified for 
readability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The maturity is five years.

7. Can I apply for more than one First Draw PPP Loan? 72
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \72\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.2.i. (``Can I apply for more than one PPP loan?'') 
(April 15, 2020) and has been modified to conform to the Economic 
Aid Act and for readability. PPP borrowers may be eligible for a 
loan under section 7(a)(37) of the Small Business Act, ``Paycheck 
Protection Program Second Draw Loans,'' see interim final rule on 
Second Draw PPP Loans that is being published separately.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    No. Except as set forth in subsection D.8, the Administrator, in 
consultation with the Secretary, determined that no eligible borrower 
may receive more than one First Draw PPP Loan. This means that if you 
apply for a PPP loan you should consider applying for the maximum 
amount. Any borrower who received a PPP loan in 2020 received a First 
Draw PPP Loan and is not eligible to receive another First Draw PPP 
Loan, but may be eligible for a second draw PPP loan.\73\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \73\ See interim final rule on Second Draw PPP Loans for 
eligibility criteria for Second Draw PPP Loans, which is being 
published separately.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

8. Can I use e-signatures or e-consents if a borrower has multiple 
owners? 74
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \74\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.2.l. (April 15, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes, e-signature or e-consents can be used regardless of the number 
of owners.

9. When will I have to begin paying principal and interest on my PPP 
loan? 75
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \75\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.2.n. (April 15, 2020), as amended by 85 FR 36038 
(June 16, 2020), and has been modified to conform to the Economic 
Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    If you submit to your lender a loan forgiveness application within 
10 months after the end of your loan forgiveness covered period, you 
will not have to make any payments of principal or interest on your 
loan before the date on which SBA remits the loan forgiveness amount on 
your loan to your lender (or notifies your lender that no loan 
forgiveness is allowed).
    Your ``loan forgiveness covered period'' is the period beginning on 
the date the lender disburses the PPP loan and ending on any date 
selected by the borrower that occurs during the period (i) beginning on 
the date that is 8 weeks after the date of disbursement and (ii) ending 
on the date that is 24 weeks after the date of disbursement. Your 
lender must notify you of remittance by SBA of the loan forgiveness 
amount (or notify you that SBA determined that no loan forgiveness is 
allowed) and the date your first payment is due. Interest continues to 
accrue during the deferment period.
    If you do not submit to your lender a loan forgiveness application 
within 10

[[Page 3704]]

months after the end of your loan forgiveness covered period, you must 
begin paying principal and interest after that period. For example, if 
a borrower's PPP loan is disbursed on January 25, 2021, the 24-week 
period ends on July 12, 2021. If the borrower does not submit a loan 
forgiveness application to its lender by May 12, 2022, the borrower 
must begin making payments on or after May 12, 2022.

10. What forms do I need and how do I submit an application for a PPP 
loan? 76
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \76\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.2.q. (April 15, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The applicant must submit Paycheck Protection Program Borrower 
Application Form (SBA Form 2483), or lender's equivalent form, and 
payroll documentation, as described above. The lender must submit SBA 
Form 2484, Paycheck Protection Program Lender's Application for 7(a) 
Loan Guaranty, electronically in accordance with program requirements 
and maintain the forms and supporting documentation in its files.

11. How can PPP loans be used? 77
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \77\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.2.r. (April 15, 2020), as amended by 85 FR 36308 
(June 16, 2020) and has been modified to conform to the Economic Aid 
Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    a. The proceeds of a PPP loan are to be used for:
    i. Payroll costs (as defined in the CARES Act, Economic Aid Act and 
this interim final rule);
    ii. costs related to the continuation of group health care, life, 
disability, vision, or dental benefits during periods of paid sick, 
medical, or family leave, and group health care, life, disability, 
vision, or dental insurance premiums;
    iii. mortgage interest payments (but not mortgage prepayments or 
principal payments);
    iv. rent payments;
    v. utility payments;
    vi. interest payments on any other debt obligations that were 
incurred before February 15, 2020;
    vii. refinancing an SBA EIDL loan made between January 31, 2020 and 
April 3, 2020; \78\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \78\ Under paragraph 7(a)(36)(Q) of the Small Business Act, as 
amended by section 341 of the Economic Aid Act, an EIDL loan used 
for purposes other than paying payroll costs and other eligible PPP 
expenditures is not considered a duplication of the assistance 
available under the PPP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    viii. covered operations expenditures (payments for any business 
software or cloud computing service that facilitates business 
operations, product or service delivery, the processing, payment, or 
tracking of payroll expenses, human resources, sales and billing 
functions, or accounting or tracking of supplies, inventory, records 
and expenses); \79\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \79\ Items viii. through xi. were added to conform to section 
304 of the Economic Aid Act. These provisions are effective as if 
included in the CARES Act and apply to any loan made before, on, or 
after December 27, 2020, including forgiveness of such loan, unless 
SBA has remitted a loan forgiveness payment to the lender on the PPP 
loan. Section 1106 of the CARES Act (15 U.S.C. 9005) was 
redesignated as section 7A, transferred to the Small Business Act 
(15 U.S.C. 631 et seq.), and inserted so as to appear after section 
7 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 636) in section 304(b) of the 
Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    ix. covered property damage costs (costs related to property damage 
and vandalism or looting due to public disturbances that occurred 
during 2020 that was not covered by insurance or other compensation);
    x. covered supplier costs (expenditures made by a borrower to a 
supplier of goods for the supply of goods that--(A) are essential to 
the operations of the borrower at the time at which the expenditure is 
made; and (B) is made pursuant to a contract, order, or purchase 
order--(i) in effect at any time before the covered period with respect 
to the applicable covered loan; or (ii) with respect to perishable 
goods, in effect before or at any time during the covered period with 
respect to the applicable covered loan); and
    xi. covered worker protection expenditures ((A) operating or a 
capital expenditures to facilitate the adaptation of the business 
activities of an entity to comply with requirements established or 
guidance issued by the Department of Health and Human Services, the 
Centers for Disease Control, or the Occupational Safety and Health 
Administration, or any equivalent requirements established or guidance 
issued by a State or local government, during the period beginning on 
March 1, 2020 and ending the date on which the national emergency with 
respect to the COVID-19 expires related to the maintenance of standards 
for sanitation, social distancing, or any other worker or customer 
safety requirement related to COVID-19; (B) such expenditures may 
include--(i) the purchase, maintenance, or renovation of assets that 
create or expand--(I) a drive-through window facility; (II) an indoor, 
outdoor, or combined air or air pressure ventilation or filtration 
system; (III) a physical barrier such as a sneeze guard; (IV) an 
expansion of additional indoor, outdoor, or combined business space; 
(V) an onsite or offsite health screening capability; or (VI) other 
assets relating to the compliance with the requirements or guidance 
described in subparagraph (A), as determined by the Administrator in 
consultation with the Secretary of Health and Human Services and the 
Secretary of Labor; and (ii) the purchase of--(I) covered materials 
described in section 328.103(a) of title 44, Code of Federal 
Regulations, or any successor regulation; (II) particulate filtering 
facepiece respirators approved by the National Institute for 
Occupational Safety and Health, including those approved only for 
emergency use authorization; or (III) other kinds of personal 
protective equipment, as determined by the Administrator in 
consultation with the Secretary of Health and Human Services and the 
Secretary of Labor; and (C) such expenditures do not include 
residential real property or intangible property).
    At least 60 percent of the PPP loan proceeds shall be used for 
payroll costs. For purposes of determining the percentage of use of 
proceeds for payroll costs, the amount of any EIDL refinanced will be 
included. For purposes of loan forgiveness, however, the borrower will 
have to document the proceeds used for payroll costs in order to 
determine the amount of forgiveness. While the Act provides that PPP 
loan proceeds may be used for the purposes listed above and for other 
allowable uses described in section 7(a) of the Small Business Act (15 
U.S.C. 636(a)), the Administrator believes that finite appropriations 
and the structure of the Act warrant a requirement that borrowers use a 
substantial portion of the loan proceeds for payroll costs, consistent 
with Congress' overarching goal of keeping workers paid and employed. 
This percentage is consistent with the limitation on the forgiveness 
amount set forth in the Flexibility Act. This limitation on use of the 
loan funds will help to ensure that the finite appropriations available 
for these loans are directed toward payroll protection, as each loan 
that is issued depletes the appropriation, regardless of whether 
portions of the loan are later forgiven.
    b. How can PPP loans be used by individuals with income from self-
employment who file a Form 1040, Schedule C? \80\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \80\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 21747, 
subsection III.1.d. (April 20, 2020) and has been modified to 
conform to the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The proceeds of a PPP loan are to be used for the following.
    i. Owner compensation replacement, calculated based on 2019 or 2020 
(using the same year that was used to calculate the loan amount) net 
profit as described in subsection 4.b.
    ii. Employee payroll costs (as defined in this interim final rule) 
for employees whose principal place of residence is in

[[Page 3705]]

the United States, if you have employees.
    iii. Mortgage interest payments (but not mortgage prepayments or 
principal payments) on any business mortgage obligation on real or 
personal property (e.g., 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), business 
rent payments (e.g., the warehouse where you store business equipment 
or the vehicle you use to perform your business), and business utility 
payments (e.g., the cost of electricity in the warehouse you rent or 
gas you use driving your business vehicle). You must have claimed or be 
entitled to claim a deduction for such expenses on your 2019 or 2020 
(whichever you used to calculate loan amount) Form 1040 Schedule C for 
them to be a permissible use. For example, if you did not claim or are 
not entitled to claim utilities expenses on your 2019 or 2020 Form 1040 
Schedule C, you cannot use the proceeds for utilities.
    iv. Interest payments on any other debt obligations that were 
incurred before February 15, 2020 (such amounts are not eligible for 
PPP loan forgiveness).
    v. Refinancing an SBA EIDL loan made between January 31, 2020 and 
April 3, 2020 (maturity will be reset to PPP's maturity of two years 
for PPP loans made before June 5, 2020 unless the borrower and lender 
mutually agree to extend the maturity of such loans to five years, or 
PPP's maturity of five years for PPP loans made on or after June 
5).\81\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \81\ Under section 7(a)(36)(Q) of the Small Business Act, as 
amended by section 341 of the Economic Aid Act, an EIDL loan used 
for purposes other than paying payroll costs and other eligible PPP 
expenditures is not considered a duplication of the assistance 
available under the PPP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    vi. Covered operations expenditures, as defined in section 7A(a) of 
the Small Business Act, to the extent they is deductible on Form 1040 
Schedule C.
    vii. Covered property damage costs, as defined in section 7A(a) of 
the Small Business Act, to the extent they is deductible on Form 1040 
Schedule C.
    viii. Covered supplier costs, as defined in section 7A(a) of the 
Small Business Act, to the extent they is deductible on Form 1040 
Schedule C.
    ix. Covered worker protection expenditures, as defined in section 
7A(a) of the Small Business Act, to the extent they is deductible on 
Form 1040 Schedule C.\82\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \82\ Items vi. through ix. were added to conform to section 304 
of the Economic Aid Act. These provisions are effective as if 
included in the CARES Act and apply to any loan made before, on, or 
after December 27, 2020, including forgiveness of such loan, unless 
SBA has remitted a loan forgiveness payment to the lender on the PPP 
loan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Administrator, in consultation with the Secretary, determined 
that it is appropriate to limit self-employed individuals' (who file a 
Form 1040 Schedule C) use of loan proceeds to those types of allowable 
uses for which the borrower made expenditures in 2019 or 2020 or that 
were used on covered property damage, as defined in section 7A(a). The 
Administrator has determined that this limitation on self-employed 
individuals who file a Form 1040 Schedule C is consistent with the 
borrower certification required by the Act; specifically, that the PPP 
loan is necessary ``to support the ongoing operations'' of the 
borrower. The Administrator and the Secretary thus believe that this 
limitation is consistent with the structure of the Act to maintain 
existing operations and payroll and not for business expansion. This 
limitation on the use of PPP loan proceeds will also help to ensure 
that the finite appropriations available for these loans are directed 
toward maintaining existing operations and payroll, as each loan that 
is made depletes the appropriation.
    c. Can PPP proceeds be used for lobbying activities or 
expenditures? \83\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \83\ This subsection has been added to conform to section 319 of 
the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    No. None of the proceeds of a PPP loan may be used for (1) lobbying 
activities, as defined in section 3 of the Lobbying Disclosure Act of 
1995 (2 U.S.C. 1602); (2) lobbying expenditures related to a State or 
local election; or (3) expenditures designed to influence the enactment 
of legislation, appropriations, regulation, administrative action, or 
Executive order proposed or pending before Congress or any State 
government, State legislature, or local legislature or legislative 
body.
    d. What happens if PPP loan funds are misused? \84\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \84\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.2.s. (April 15, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    If you use PPP funds for unauthorized purposes, SBA will direct you 
to repay those amounts. If you knowingly use the funds for unauthorized 
purposes, you will be subject to additional liability such as charges 
for fraud. If one of your shareholders, members, or partners uses PPP 
funds for unauthorized purposes, SBA will have recourse against the 
shareholder, member, or partner for the unauthorized use.

12. What certifications need to be made? \85\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \85\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.2.s. (April 15, 2020), as amended by 85 FR 36308 
(June 16, 2020) and has been modified to conform to the Economic Aid 
Act and the revised PPP Borrower Application Form (SBA Form 2483).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    On the PPP borrower application, an authorized representative of 
the applicant must certify in good faith to all of the below: \86\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \86\ A representative of the applicant can certify for the 
business as a whole if the representative is legally authorized to 
do so. The certifications have been revised to conform to the 
Economic Aid Act and the revised PPP Borrower Application Form (SBA 
Form 2483).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    i. The Applicant was in operation on February 15, 2020, has not 
permanently closed, and was either an eligible self-employed 
individual, independent contractor, or sole proprietorship with no 
employees, or had employees for whom it paid salaries and payroll taxes 
or paid independent contractors, as reported on a Form 1099-MISC.
    ii. Current economic uncertainty makes this loan request necessary 
to support the ongoing operations of the applicant.
    iii. The funds will be used to retain workers and maintain payroll; 
or make payments for mortgage interest, rent, utilities, covered 
operations expenditures, covered property damage costs, covered 
supplier costs, and covered worker protection expenditures as specified 
under the Paycheck Protection Program Rules; I understand that if the 
funds are knowingly used for unauthorized purposes, the federal 
government may hold me legally liable such as for charges of fraud. (As 
explained above, not more than 40 percent of loan proceeds may be used 
for nonpayroll costs.)
    iv. I understand that loan forgiveness will be provided for the sum 
of documented payroll costs, covered mortgage interest payments, 
covered rent payments, covered utilities, covered operations 
expenditures, covered property damage costs, covered supplier costs, 
and covered worker protection expenditures, and not more than 40% of 
the forgiven amount may be for non-payroll costs. If required, the 
Applicant will provide to the Lender and/or SBA documentation verifying 
the number of full-time equivalent employees on the Applicant's payroll 
as well as the dollar amounts of eligible expenses for the covered 
period following this loan.
    v. The Applicant has not and will not receive another loan under 
the Paycheck Protection Program, section 7(a)(36) of the Small Business 
Act (15 U.S.C.

[[Page 3706]]

636(a)(36)) (this does not include Paycheck Protection Program second 
draw loans, section 7(a)(37) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 
636(a)(37)).
    vi. The Applicant has not and will not receive a Shuttered Venue 
Operator grant from SBA.
    vii. The President, the Vice President, the head of an Executive 
department, or a Member of Congress, or the spouse of such person as 
determined under applicable common law, does not directly or indirectly 
hold a controlling interest in the Applicant, with such terms having 
the meanings provided in section 322 of the Economic Aid to Hard-Hit 
Small Businesses, Nonprofits, and Venues Act.
    viii. The Applicant is not an issuer, the securities of which are 
listed on an exchange registered as a national securities exchange 
under section 6 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78f).
    ix. I further certify that the information provided in this 
application and the information provided in all supporting documents 
and forms is true and accurate in all material respects. I understand 
that knowingly making a false statement to obtain a guaranteed loan 
from SBA is punishable under the law, including under 18 U.S.C. 1001 
and 3571 by imprisonment of not more than five years and/or a fine of 
up to $250,000; under 15 U.S.C. 645 by imprisonment of not more than 
two years and/or a fine of not more than $5,000; and, if submitted to a 
federally insured institution, under 18 U.S.C. 1014 by imprisonment of 
not more than thirty years and/or a fine of not more than $1,000,000.
    x. I acknowledge that the Lender will confirm the eligible loan 
amount using required documents submitted. I understand, acknowledge, 
and agree that the Lender can share the tax information with SBA's 
authorized representatives, including authorized representatives of the 
SBA Office of Inspector General, for the purpose of compliance with SBA 
Loan Program Requirements and all SBA reviews.

13. Limited Safe Harbor With Respect to Certification Concerning Need 
for PPP Loan Request 87
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \87\ This subsection has been added to codify the safe harbor 
contained in FAQ 46 (posted May 13, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The CARES Act requires each applicant applying for a PPP loan to 
certify in good faith ``that the uncertainty of current economic 
conditions makes necessary the loan request to support the ongoing 
obligations'' of the applicant. SBA, in consultation with the 
Department of the Treasury, issued additional guidance on May 13, 2020 
concerning how SBA will review the required good-faith certification. 
See FAQ 46 (posted May 13, 2020). This guidance included a safe harbor 
providing that any PPP borrower, together with its affiliates, that 
received PPP loans with an original principal amount of less than $2 
million will be deemed to have made the required certification 
concerning the necessity of the loan request in good faith.

14. Can my PPP loan be forgiven in whole or in part? 88
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \88\ This subsection replaces the rule originally published at 
85 FR 20811, subsection III.2.o (April 15, 2020), as amended by 85 
FR 36308 (June 16, 2020) and has been modified to conform to the 
Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes. The amount of loan forgiveness can be up to the full principal 
amount of the loan and any accrued interest. An eligible borrower will 
not be responsible for any loan payment if the borrower uses all of the 
loan proceeds for forgivable purposes and employee and compensation 
levels are maintained or, if not, an applicable safe harbor or 
exemption applies. The actual amount of loan forgiveness will depend, 
in part, on the total amount of payroll costs (including employer 
contributions for group health, life, disability, vision and dental 
insurance), payments of interest on mortgage obligations incurred 
before February 15, 2020, rent payments on leases dated before February 
15, 2020, utility payments for service that began before February 15, 
2020, covered operations expenditures, covered property damage costs, 
covered supplier costs, and covered worker protection expenditures over 
the loan forgiveness covered period.\89\ Payroll costs that are 
qualified wages taken into account in determining the Employer 
Retention Credit are not eligible for loan forgiveness. The ``loan 
forgiveness covered period'' is the period beginning on the date the 
lender disburses the PPP loan and ending on any date selected by the 
borrower that occurs during the period (i) beginning on the date that 
is 8 weeks after the date of disbursement and (ii) ending on the date 
that is 24 weeks after the date of disbursement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \89\ Covered operations expenditures, covered property damage 
costs, covered supplier costs, and covered worker protection 
expenditures were added as eligible expenses in section 304 of the 
Economic Aid Act. Except for loans made pursuant to section 7(a)(36) 
of the Small Business Act for which SBA has remitted a loan 
forgiveness payment to the lender before December 27, 2020, these 
eligible expenses apply to any loan made before, on, or after 
December 27, 2020, including forgiveness of such a loan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    To receive full loan forgiveness, a borrower must use at least 60 
percent of the PPP loan for payroll costs, and not more than 40 percent 
of the loan forgiveness amount may be attributable to nonpayroll costs. 
For example, if a borrower uses 59 percent of its PPP loan for payroll 
costs, it will not receive the full amount of loan forgiveness it might 
otherwise be eligible to receive. Instead, the borrower will receive 
partial loan forgiveness, based on the requirement that 60 percent of 
the forgiveness amount must be attributable to payroll costs. For 
example, if a borrower receives a $100,000 PPP loan, and during the 
covered period the borrower spends $54,000 (or 54 percent) of its loan 
on payroll costs, then because the borrower used less than 60 percent 
of its loan on payroll costs, the maximum amount of loan forgiveness 
the borrower may receive is $90,000 (with $54,000 in payroll costs 
constituting 60 percent of the forgiveness amount and $36,000 in 
nonpayroll costs constituting 40 percent of the forgiveness amount). 
Because the Economic Aid Act changed the loan forgiveness covered 
period from either an 8- or 24-week period to a covered period between 
8 and 24 weeks at the election of the borrower, SBA is eliminating the 
``alternative covered period'' as defined in the interim final rule 
published at 85 FR 33004, 33006 (June 1, 2020), as amended.
    Additionally, an eligible borrower that received a loan of $150,000 
or less shall not, at the time of its application for loan forgiveness, 
be required to submit any application or documentation in addition to 
the certification and information required by paragraph 7A(l)(1)(A) of 
the Small Business Act. Such borrowers must retain records relevant to 
the form that prove compliance with the PPP requirements--with respect 
to employment records, for the 4-year period following submission of 
the loan forgiveness application, and with respect to other records, 
for the 3-year period following submission of the loan forgiveness 
application. All other borrowers must follow the existing requirements 
for loan forgiveness applications and records retention. SBA may review 
and audit PPP loans of $150,000 or less and access any records the 
borrower is required to retain. All borrowers with loans of any size 
must provide documentation independently to a lender to satisfy 
relevant Federal, State, local or other statutory or regulatory 
requirements or in connection with an SBA loan review.
    The Economic Aid Act repealed the CARES Act provision requiring SBA 
to deduct EIDL Advance Amounts received by borrowers from the 
forgiveness payment amounts remitted

[[Page 3707]]

by SBA to the lender. The EIDL Advance Amount received by the borrower 
will not reduce the amount of forgiveness to which the borrower is 
entitled and will not be deducted from the forgiveness payment amount 
that SBA remits to the lender. Any EIDL Advance Amounts previously 
deducted from a borrower's forgiveness amount will be remitted to the 
lender, together with interest to the remittance date.

15. Do independent contractors count as employees for purposes of PPP 
loan forgiveness? 90
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \90\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.2.p. (April 15, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    No, independent contractors have the ability to apply for a PPP 
loan on their own so they do not count for purposes of a borrower's PPP 
loan forgiveness.

16. For loans made prior to December 27, 2020, what additional 
documentation must a borrower submit when the President of the United 
States, Vice President of the United States, the head of an Executive 
department, or a Member of Congress, or the spouse of any of the 
preceding, directly or indirectly holds a controlling interest in the 
borrower?

    For PPP loans made before December 27, 2020, if the President of 
the United States, Vice President of the United States, the head of an 
Executive department, or a Member of Congress, or the spouse of such 
person as determined under applicable common law, directly or 
indirectly holds a controlling interest in the borrower, the principal 
executive officer, or individual performing a similar function, of the 
borrower must disclose that information to SBA. Such disclosure must be 
made not later than January 26, 2021, if the borrower submitted an 
application for forgiveness before December 27, 2020, or not later than 
30 days after submitting an application for forgiveness.

C. What do lenders need to know and do?

1. Who is eligible to make PPP loans? 91
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \91\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.3.a. (April 15, 2020) and has been modified to 
conform to additional interim final rules or guidance and sections 
323 and 343 of the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    a. All SBA 7(a) lenders are automatically approved to make PPP 
loans on a delegated basis.
    b. The Act provides that the authority to make PPP loans can be 
extended to additional lenders determined by the Administrator and the 
Secretary to have the necessary qualifications to process, close, 
disburse, and service loans made with the SBA guarantee. Since SBA is 
authorized to make PPP loans (and loans under section 7(a)(37) of the 
Small Business Act) up to $806.45 billion by March 31, 2021, the 
Adminstrator and the Secretary have jointly determined that authorizing 
additional lenders is necessary to achieve the purpose of allowing as 
many eligible borrowers as possible to receive loans by the March 31, 
2021 deadline.
    c. The following types of lenders have been determined to meet the 
criteria and are eligible to make PPP loans unless they currently are 
designated in Troubled Condition by their primary Federal regulator or 
are subject to a formal enforcement action with their primary Federal 
regulator that addresses unsafe or unsound lending practices:
    i. Any federally insured depository institution or any federally 
insured credit union;
    ii. Any Farm Credit System institution \92\ (other than the Federal 
Agricultural Mortgage Corporation) as defined in 12 U.S.C. 2002(a) that 
applies the requirements under the Bank Secrecy Act and its 
implementing regulations (collectively, BSA) as a federally regulated 
financial institution, or functionally equivalent requirements that are 
not altered by this rule; and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \92\ Section 314 of the Economic Aid Act contains the following 
information related to Farm Credit System Institutions: ``(1) 
APPLICABLE RULES.--Solely with respect to loans under paragraphs 
(36) and (37) of section 7(a) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 
636(a)), Farm Credit Administration regulations and guidance issued 
as of July 14, 2020, and compliance with such regulations and 
guidance, shall be deemed functionally equivalent to requirements 
referenced in section 3(a)(iii)(II) of the interim final rule of the 
Administration entitled `Business Loan Program Temporary Changes; 
Paycheck Protection Program' (85 FR 20811 (April 15, 2020)) or any 
similar requirement referenced in that interim final rule in 
implementing such paragraph (37).''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    iii. Any depository or non-depository financing provider that 
originates, maintains, and services business loans or other commercial 
financial receivables and participation interests; has a formalized 
compliance program; applies the requirements under the BSA as a 
federally regulated financial institution, or the BSA requirements of 
an equivalent federally regulated financial institution; has been 
operating since at least February 15, 2019, and has originated, 
maintained, or serviced more than $50 million in business loans or 
other commercial financial receivables during a consecutive 12 month 
period in the past 36 months, or is a service provider to any insured 
depository institution that has a contract to support such 
institution's lending activities in accordance with 12 U.S.C. 1867(c) 
and is in good standing with the appropriate Federal banking 
agency.\93\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \93\ This subsection c.iii. was modified to implement the rule 
originally published at 85 FR 26324, subsection III.2.a. (May 4, 
2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    d. Qualified institutions described in 1.c.i. and ii. will be 
automatically qualified under delegated authority by the SBA upon 
transmission of CARES Act Section 1102 Lender Agreement (SBA Form 3506) 
unless they currently are designated in Troubled Condition by their 
primary Federal regulator or are subject to a formal enforcement action 
by their primary Federal regulator that addresses unsafe or unsound 
lending practices.
    e. A non-bank lender may be approved to make PPP loans if it has 
originated, maintained, or serviced more than $10 million in business 
loans or other commercial financial receivables during a 12-month 
period in the past 36 months, if the non-bank lender is (1) a community 
development financial institution (other than a federally insured bank 
or federally insured credit union) or (2) a majority minority-, women-, 
or veteran/military-owned lender.\94\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \94\ Lenders described in this subsection (e.) should follow the 
special instructions in footnote 1 of the 1102 Lender Agreement--
Non-Bank and Non-Insured Depository Institution Lenders (SBA Form 
3507). This subsection (e.) was adapted from the rule originally 
published at 85 FR 26324, subsection III.2.b. (May 4, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. Do lenders have to register in SAM.gov to make PPP loans? 
95
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \95\ This subsection adds a new requirement that all PPP lenders 
must register in SAM.gov. See 2 CFR 25.110(c)(2)(iii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes. Given the exigent circumstances in which small businesses and 
lenders currently find themselves due to the COVID-19 pandemic, PPP 
lenders will have thirty (30) days from the date of the first PPP loan 
disbursement made by them after December 27, 2020 to complete SAM 
registration and provide SBA with the lender's unique entity 
identifier.

3. What do lenders have to do in terms of loan underwriting? 
96
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \96\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.3.b. (April 15, 2020) and has been modified to 
conform to additional rules or guidance and the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Each lender shall:
    a. Confirm receipt of borrower certifications contained in Paycheck 
Protection Program Borrower Application Form (SBA Form 2483) issued by 
the Administration or lender's equivalent form;
    b. Confirm receipt of information demonstrating that a borrower was 
either an eligible self-employed individual, independent contractor, or

[[Page 3708]]

sole proprietorship with no employees or had employees for whom the 
borrower paid salaries and payroll taxes on or around February 15, 
2020;
    c. Confirm the dollar amount of average monthly payroll costs for 
2019 or 2020 by reviewing the payroll documentation submitted with the 
borrower's application; \97\ and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \97\ See PPP FAQ 1 (April 3, 2020) for further information on 
this step.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    d. Follow applicable BSA requirements:
    i. Federally insured depository institutions and federally insured 
credit unions should continue to follow their existing BSA protocols 
when making PPP loans to either new or existing customers who are 
eligible borrowers under the PPP. PPP loans for existing customers will 
not require re-verification under applicable BSA requirements, unless 
otherwise indicated by the institution's risk-based approach to BSA 
compliance.
    ii. Entities that are not presently subject to the requirements of 
the BSA, should, prior to engaging in PPP lending activities, including 
making PPP loans to either new or existing customers who are eligible 
borrowers under the PPP, establish an anti-money laundering (AML) 
compliance program equivalent to that of a comparable federally 
regulated institution. Depending upon the comparable federally 
regulated institution, such a program may include a customer 
identification program (CIP), which includes identifying and verifying 
their PPP borrowers' identities (including e.g., date of birth, 
address, and taxpayer identification number), and, if that PPP borrower 
is a company, following any applicable beneficial ownership information 
collection requirements. Alternatively, if available, entities may rely 
on the CIP of a federally insured depository institution or federally 
insured credit union with an established CIP as part of its AML 
program. In either instance, entities should also understand the nature 
and purpose of their PPP customer relationships to develop customer 
risk profiles. Such entities will also generally have to identify and 
report certain suspicious activity to the U.S. Department of the 
Treasury's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). If such 
entities have questions with regard to meeting these requirements, they 
should contact the FinCEN Regulatory Support Section at [email protected]. 
In addition, FinCEN has created a COVID-19-specific contact channel, 
via a specific drop-down category, for entities to communicate to 
FinCEN COVID-19-related concerns while adhering to their BSA 
obligations. Entities that wish to communicate such COVID-19-related 
concerns to FinCEN should go to www.FinCEN.gov, click on ``Need 
Assistance,'' and select ``COVID19'' in the subject drop-down list.
    Each lender's underwriting obligation under the PPP is limited to 
the items above and reviewing the ``Paycheck Protection Borrower 
Application Form.'' Borrowers must submit such documentation as is 
necessary to establish eligibility such as payroll records, payroll tax 
filings, or Form 1099-MISC, Schedule C or F, income and expenses from a 
sole proprietorship, or bank records. For borrowers that do not have 
any such documentation, the borrower must provide other supporting 
documentation, such as bank records, sufficient to demonstrate the 
qualifying payroll amount.
    A lender may rely on any certification or documentation submitted 
by an applicant for a PPP loan or an eligible recipient or eligible 
entity that (A) is submitted pursuant to all applicable statutory 
requirements, regulations, and guidance related to a PPP loan, 
including under paragraph 7(a)(36) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 
636(a)(36)); and (B) attests that the applicant, eligible recipient, or 
eligible entity, as applicable, has accurately provided the 
certification or documentation to the lender in accordance with the 
statutory requirements, regulations, and guidance related to PPP loans. 
With respect to a lender that relies on such a certification or 
documentation related to a PPP loan, an enforcement action may not be 
taken against the lender, and the lender shall not be subject to any 
penalties relating to loan origination or forgiveness of the PPP loan, 
if--(A) the lender acts in good faith relating to loan origination or 
forgiveness of the PPP loan based on that reliance; and (B) all other 
relevant Federal, State, local, and other statutory and regulatory 
requirements applicable to the lender are satisfied with respect to the 
PPP loan.\98\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \98\ This paragraph was added to conform to section 305 of the 
Economic Aid Act. This shall be effective as if included in the 
CARES Act and shall apply to any loan made before, on, or after 
December 27, 2020, including forgiveness of such a loan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

4. Can lenders rely on borrower documentation for loan forgiveness? 
99
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \99\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.3.c. (April 15, 2020) and has been modified for 
readability. SBA also intends to issue a consolidated interim final 
rule governing all aspects of loan forgiveness and the loan review 
process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes. The lender does not need to independently verify the 
borrower's reported information if the borrower submits documentation 
supporting its request for loan forgiveness and attests that it 
accurately verified the payments for eligible costs.

5. What fees will lenders be paid? 100
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \100\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.3.d. (April 15, 2020) and has been modified to 
conform to section 340 of the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    For PPP loans made on or after December 27, 2020, SBA will pay 
lenders fees, based on the balance of the financing outstanding at the 
time of disbursement of the loan, for processing PPP loans in the 
following amounts:
    i. For loans of not more than $50,000, an amount equal to the 
lesser of fifty (50) percent or $2,500;
    ii. Five (5) percent for loans of more than $50,000 and not more 
than $350,000;
    iii. Three (3) percent for loans of more than $350,000 and less 
than $2,000,000; and
    iv. One (1) percent for loans of at least $2,000,000.
    SBA will pay the fee not later than 5 days after the reported 
disbursement of the PPP loan and, as required by the Economic Aid Act, 
may not require the fee to be repaid by the lender unless the lender is 
found guilty of an act of fraud in connection with the PPP loan.

6. Can PPP loans be sold into the secondary market? 101
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \101\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.4.d (April 15, 2020) and modified to reflect that 
advance purchases are not available.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes. A PPP loan may be sold on the secondary market after the loan 
is fully disbursed. A PPP loan may be sold on the secondary market at a 
premium or a discount to par value.

7. Do the requirements for loan pledges under 13 CFR 120.434 apply to 
PPP loans pledged for borrowings from a Federal Reserve Bank (FRB) or 
advances by a Federal Home Loan Bank (FHLB)? 102
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \102\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 21747, 
subsection III.3. (April 20, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    No. Pursuant to SBA regulations at 13 CFR 120.435(d) and (e), a 
pledge of 7(a) loans to a FRB or FHLB does not require SBA's prior 
written consent or notice to SBA. SBA, in consultation with Treasury, 
has determined that for purposes of loans made under the PPP, the 
additional requirements set forth in 120.434 shall also not apply. This 
would mean, for example, that SBA would not have to approve loan

[[Page 3709]]

documents or require a multi-party agreement among SBA, the lender, and 
others.

8. Are lenders required to use a promissory note provided by SBA or may 
they use their own? 103
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \103\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 23450, 
subsection III.1.a. (April 28, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Lenders may use their own promissory note or an SBA form of 
promissory note.

9. Are lenders required to use a separate SBA Authorization document to 
issue PPP loans? 104
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \104\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 23450, 
subsection III.1.b. (April 28, 2020) and has been modified to 
conform to the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    No. A lender does not need a separate SBA Authorization for SBA to 
guarantee a PPP loan. However, lenders must have executed SBA Form 2484 
(the Lender Application Form--Paycheck Protection Program Loan 
Guaranty) \105\ to issue PPP loans and receive a loan number for each 
originated PPP loan. Lenders may include in their promissory notes for 
PPP loans any terms and conditions, including relating to amortization 
and disclosure, that are not inconsistent with section 1102 of the 
CARES Act and section 7A of the Small Business Act, the PPP Interim 
Final Rules and guidance, and SBA Form 2484. See FAQ 21 (posted April 
13, 2020). The decision not to require a separate SBA Authorization in 
order to ensure that critical PPP loans are disbursed as efficiently as 
practicable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \105\ This requirement is satisfied by a lender when the lender 
completes the process of submitting a loan through the E-Tran 
system; no transmission or retention of a physical copy of Form 2484 
is required.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

10. By when must a lender electronically submit an SBA Form 1502 
indicating that PPP loan funds have been disbursed? 106
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \106\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 26321, 
subsection III.1.b. (May 4, 2020) and has been modified to conform 
to the Economic Aid Act and for readability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    SBA has made available a specific SBA Form 1502 reporting process 
through which PPP lenders report on PPP loans and collect the 
processing fee on fully disbursed loans to which they are entitled. 
Lenders must electronically upload SBA Form 1502 information within 20 
calendar days after a PPP loan is approved. The lender must report on 
SBA Form 1502 whether it has fully disbursed PPP loan proceeds. A 
lender will not receive a processing fee: (1) Prior to full 
disbursement of the PPP loan; (2) if the PPP loan is cancelled before 
disbursement; or (3) if the PPP loan is cancelled or voluntarily 
terminated and repaid after disbursement (including if a borrower 
repays the PPP loan proceeds to conform to the borrower's certification 
regarding the necessity of the PPP loan request). If the lender has 
received a processing fee on a loan that was cancelled or voluntarily 
terminated and repaid after disbursement (including if a borrower 
repaid the PPP loan proceeds to conform to the borrower's certification 
regarding the necessity of the PPP loan request), SBA will not require 
the lender to repay the processing fee unless the lender is found 
guilty of an act of fraud in connection with the PPP loan. In addition 
to providing ACH credit information to direct payment of the requested 
processing fee, lenders will be required to confirm that all PPP loans 
for which the lender is requesting a processing fee have been fully 
disbursed on the disbursement dates and in the loan amounts reported. A 
lender must report through either E-Tran Servicing or the SBA Form 1502 
report any PPP loans that have been cancelled before disbursement or 
that have been cancelled or voluntarily terminated and repaid after 
disbursement.

11. How do lenders report disbursements on PPP loans that are approved 
for loan increases due to the Economic Aid Act? 107
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \107\ This subsection was added to conform to the Economic Aid 
Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Lenders must submit the SBA Form 1502 information within 20 
calendar days after a PPP loan increase is approved following the SBA 
Form 1502 reporting process. See subsection C.10. for more information.

D. What do both borrowers and lenders need to know and do?

1. What are the loan terms and conditions? 108
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \108\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.4.a. (April 15, 2020) and modified to conform to the 
Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Loans will be guaranteed under the PPP under the same terms, 
conditions and processes as other 7(a) loans, with certain changes 
including but not limited to:
    a. The guarantee percentage is 100 percent.
    b. No collateral will be required.
    c. No personal guarantees will be required.
    d. The interest rate will be 100 basis points or one percent, 
calculated on a non-compounding, non-adjustable basis.\109\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \109\ This subsection (d) was revised to conform to section 339 
of the Economic Aid Act. The revision applies to PPP loans made on 
or after December 27, 2020, but may apply with respect to a PPP loan 
made before that date upon the mutual agreement of the lender and 
the borrower.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    e. All loans will be processed by all lenders under delegated 
authority and lenders will be permitted to rely on certifications of 
the borrower in order to determine eligibility of the borrower and the 
use of loan proceeds.

2. Do lenders have to apply the ``credit elsewhere test''? 
110
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \110\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.3.e. (April 15, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    No. When evaluating an applicant's eligibility lenders will not be 
required to apply the ``credit elsewhere test'' (as set forth in 
section 7(a)(1)(A) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 636) and SBA 
regulations at 13 CFR 120.101).

3. Are there any fee waivers? 111
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \111\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.4.a. (April 15, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    a. There will be no up-front guarantee fee payable to SBA by the 
borrower;
    b. There will be no lender's annual service fee (``on-going 
guaranty fee'') payable to SBA;
    c. There will be no subsidy recoupment fee; and
    d. There will be no fee payable to SBA for any guarantee sold into 
the secondary market.

4. Who pays the fee to an agent who provides assistance in connection 
with a PPP loan? 112
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \112\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 20811, 
subsection III.4.c. (April 15, 2020) and modified to conform to 
section 340 of the Economic Aid Act. This revision is effective as 
if included in the CARES Act and applies to PPP loans made before, 
on, or after December 27, 2020, including forgiveness of such a 
loan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Agent fees may not be paid out of the proceeds of a PPP loan. If a 
borrower has knowingly retained an agent, such fees will be paid by the 
borrower. A lender is only responsible for paying fees to an agent for 
services for which the lender directly contracts with the agent. The 
total amount that an agent may collect from the lender for assistance 
in preparing an application for a PPP loan (including referral to the 
lender) may not exceed:
    a. One (1) percent for loans of not more than $350,000;
    b. 0.50 percent for loans of more than $350,000 and less than $2 
million; and
    c. 0.25 percent for loans of at least $2 million.
    The Act authorizes the Administrator to establish limits on agent 
fees. The Administrator, in consultation with the Secretary, determined 
that the agent fee limits set forth above are reasonable based upon the 
application

[[Page 3710]]

requirements and the fees that lenders receive for making PPP loans.

5. Can a borrower take multiple draws from a PPP loan and thereby delay 
the start of the covered period? 113
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \113\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 26321, 
subsection III.1.a. (May 4, 2020), as amended by 85 FR 26321 (June 
19, 2020), and has been modified for readability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    No. The lender must make a one-time, full disbursement of the PPP 
loan within ten calendar days of loan approval; for the purposes of 
this rule, a loan is considered approved when the loan is assigned a 
loan number by SBA.\114\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \114\ If the tenth calendar day is a Saturday, Sunday, or legal 
holiday, the period continues to run until the end of the next 
business day.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Notwithstanding this limitation, lenders are not responsible for 
delays in disbursement attributable to a borrower's failure to timely 
provide required loan documentation, including a signed promissory 
note. Loans for which funds have not been disbursed because a borrower 
has not submitted required loan documentation within 20 calendar days 
of loan approval shall be cancelled by the lender. When disbursing 
loans, lenders must send any amount of loan proceeds designated for the 
refinance of an EIDL loan directly to SBA and not to the borrower.

6. If a partnership received a PPP loan that did not include any 
compensation for its partners, can the loan amount be increased to 
include partner compensation? 115
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \115\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 29842, 
subsection III.1.a. (May 19, 2020) and has been revised to conform 
to sections 312 and 344 of the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes. If a partnership received a PPP loan that only included 
amounts necessary for payroll costs of the partnership's employees and 
other eligible operating expenses, but did not include any amount for 
partner compensation,\116\ the lender may electronically submit a 
request through SBA's E-Tran Servicing site to increase the PPP loan 
amount to include appropriate partner compensation, even if the loan 
has been fully disbursed and even if the lender's first SBA Form 1502 
report to SBA on the PPP loan has already been submitted. In no event 
can the increased loan amount exceed the maximum loan amount allowed 
under the PPP Program, which is $10 million for an individual borrower 
or $20 million for a corporate group. Additionally, the borrower must 
provide the lender with required documentation to support the 
calculation of the increase. Any request for an increase must be 
submitted electronically in E-Tran on or before March 31, 2021, and is 
subject to the availability of funds.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \116\ A partner in a partnership may not submit a separate PPP 
loan application as a self-employed individual. Instead, the self-
employment income of general active partners may be reported as a 
payroll cost, up to $100,000 on an annualized basis, as prorated for 
the period during which the payments are made or the obligation to 
make the payments is incurred, on a PPP loan application filed by or 
on behalf of the partnership.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As described in subsection B.1.c., partnerships, rather than 
individual partners, are eligible for a PPP loan. As described in 
subsection B.4.e., self-employment income of general active partners 
could be reported as a payroll cost, up to $100,000 on an annualized 
basis, as prorated for the period during which the payments are made or 
the obligation to make the payments is incurred, on a PPP loan 
application filed by or on behalf of the partnership. For guidance 
describing how to calculate partnership PPP loan amounts and defining 
the self-employment income of partners, see How to Calculate Maximum 
Loan Amounts, Question 4 at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/2020-04/How-to-Calculate-Loan-Amounts.pdf (April 20, 2020).

7. If a seasonal employer received a PPP loan before December 27, 2020, 
can the loan amount be increased based on a revised calculation of the 
maximum loan amount? 117
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \117\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 29842, 
subsection III.1.b. (May 19, 2020) and has been revised to conform 
to sections 312 and 336 of the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes. If a seasonal employer received a PPP loan before December 27, 
2020, and such employer would be eligible for a higher maximum loan 
amount under section 336 of the Economic Aid Act, as described in 
subsection B.4.c., the lender may electronically submit a request 
through SBA's E-Tran Servicing site to increase the PPP loan amount, 
even if the loan has been fully disbursed and even if the lender's 
first SBA Form 1502 report to SBA on the PPP loan has already been 
submitted. In no event can the increased loan amount exceed the maximum 
PPP loan amount ($10 million for an individual borrower or $20 million 
for a corporate group). Additionally, the borrower must provide the 
lender with required documentation to support the calculation of the 
increase. Any request for an increase must be submitted electronically 
in E-Tran on or before March 31, 2021, and is subject to the 
availability of funds.

8. Which other PPP borrowers can reapply or request an increase in 
their PPP loan amount? 118
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \118\ This subsection was added to conform to section 312 of the 
Economic Aid Act. See also recalculation available under subsection 
B.4.d. above for farmers and ranchers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The following borrowers can reapply or request an increase in their 
PPP loan amount:
    a. If a borrower returned all of a PPP loan, the borrower may 
reapply for a PPP loan in an amount the borrower is eligible for under 
current PPP rules.
    b. If a borrower returned part of a PPP loan, the borrower may 
reapply for an amount equal to the difference between the amount 
retained and the amount previously approved.
    c. If a borrower did not accept the full amount of a PPP loan for 
which it was approved, the borrower may request an increase in the 
amount of the PPP loan up to the amount previously approved.
    Any request for an increase must be submitted electronically in E-
Tran on or before March 31, 2021, and is subject to the availability of 
funds. SBA will issue additional guidance on the process to reapply or 
request a loan increase under subsections D.6, D.7, and D.8.

9. If a borrower's PPP loan has already been fully disbursed, can the 
lender make an additional disbursement for the increased loan proceeds? 
119
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \119\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 29842, 
subsection III.2.a. (May 19, 2020) and revised to conform to section 
312 of the Economic Aid Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes. Notwithstanding the requirement set forth in paragraph 1.a. of 
the interim final rule on disbursements posted on April 28, 2020, i.e., 
that lenders make a one-time, full disbursement of the PPP loan within 
ten calendar days of loan approval, if a PPP loan is increased under 
subsections D.6., D.7., or D.8., the lender may make a single 
additional disbursement of the increased loan proceeds.

10. Are recipients of PPP loans entitled to exemptions on the grounds 
provided in Federal nondiscrimination laws for sex-specific admissions 
practices, sex-specific domestic violence shelters, coreligionist 
housing, or Indian tribal preferences in connection with adoption or 
foster care practices? 120
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \120\ This subsection was originally published at 85 FR 27287, 
section III.1. (May 8, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Yes. With respect to any loan or loan forgiveness under the PPP, 
the nondiscrimination provisions in the applicable SBA regulations 
incorporate the limitations and exemptions provided in corresponding 
Federal statutory or regulatory

[[Page 3711]]

nondiscrimination provisions for sex-specific admissions practices at 
preschools, non-vocational elementary or secondary schools, and private 
undergraduate higher education institutions under Title IX of the 
Education Amendments of 1972 (20 U.S.C. 1681 et seq.), for sex-specific 
emergency shelters and coreligionist housing under the Fair Housing Act 
of 1968 (42 U.S.C. 3601 et seq.), and for adoption or foster care 
practices giving child placement preferences to Indian tribes under the 
Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 (25 U.S.C. 1901 et seq.).
    In addition, for purposes of the PPP, SBA regulations do not bar a 
religious nonprofit entity from making decisions with respect to the 
membership or the employment of individuals of a particular religion to 
perform work connected with the carrying on by such nonprofit of its 
activities.

E. Additional Information

    All loans guaranteed by the SBA pursuant to the CARES Act and the 
Economic Aid Act will be made consistent with constitutional, 
statutory, and regulatory protections for religious liberty, including 
the First Amendment to the Constitution, the Religious Freedom 
Restoration Act, 42 U.S.C. 2000bb-1 and bb-3, and SBA regulation at 13 
CFR 113.3-1h, which provides that nothing in SBA nondiscrimination 
regulations shall apply to a religious corporation, association, 
educational institution or society with respect to the membership or 
the employment of individuals of a particular religion to perform work 
connected with the carrying on by such corporation, association, 
educational institution or society of its religious activities.
    SBA may provide further guidance, if needed, through SBA notices 
and a program guide which will be posted on SBA's website at 
www.sba.gov.
    Questions on the Paycheck Protection Program 7(a) Loans may be 
directed to the Lender Relations Specialist in the local SBA Field 
Office. The local SBA Field Office may be found at https://www.sba.gov/tools/local-assistance/districtoffices.

Compliance With Executive Orders 12866, 12988, 13132, 13563, and 13771, 
the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. Ch. 35), and the Regulatory 
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612)

Executive Orders 12866, 13563, and 13771

    This interim final rule is economically significant for the 
purposes of Executive Orders 12866 and 13563, and the Office of 
Management and Budget's Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs 
(OIRA) has determined that this is a major rule under the Congressional 
Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2)). SBA, however, is proceeding under the 
emergency provision at Executive Order 12866 section 6(a)(3)(D) based 
on the need to move expeditiously to mitigate the current economic 
conditions arising from the COVID-19 emergency. This rule's designation 
under Executive Order 13771 will be informed by public comment.
    This rule is necessary to implement the Economic Aid Act in order 
to provide economic relief to small businesses nationwide adversely 
impacted under the COVID-19 Emergency Declaration. We anticipate that 
this rule will result in substantial benefits to small businesses, 
their employees, and the communities they serve. However, we lack data 
to estimate the effects of this rule.
    The Administrator of OIRA has determined that this is a major rule 
for purposes of the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.) 
(CRA). Under section 801(3) of the CRA, a major rule takes effect 60 
days after the rule is published in the Federal Register.
    Notwithstanding this requirement, section 808(2) of the CRA allows 
agencies to dispense with the requirements of section 801 when the 
agency for good cause finds that such procedure would be impracticable, 
unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest and the rule shall take 
effect at such time as the agency promulgating the rule determines. 
Pursuant to section 808(2) of the CRA, SBA finds, for good cause, that 
a 60-day delay in the effective date is unnecessary and contrary to the 
public interest.
    As discussed elsewhere in this interim final rule, the last day to 
apply for and receive a PPP loan is March 31, 2021. Given the short 
duration of this program, and the urgent need to issue loans quickly, 
the Administrator in consultation with the Secretary has determined 
that it is impractical and not in the public interest to provide a 
delayed effective date. An immediate effective date will give small 
businesses the maximum amount of time to apply for loans and lenders 
the maximum amount of time to process applications before the program 
ends.

Executive Order 12988

    SBA has drafted this rule, to the extent practicable, in accordance 
with the standards set forth in section 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of Executive 
Order 12988, to minimize litigation, eliminate ambiguity, and reduce 
burden. The rule has no preemptive effect but does have some 
retroactive effect consistent with specific applicability provisions of 
the Economic Aid Act (such provisions are identified in the footnotes).

Executive Order 13132

    SBA has determined that this rule will not have substantial direct 
effects on the States, on the relationship between the National 
Government and the States, or on the distribution of power and 
responsibilities among the various layers of government. Therefore, SBA 
has determined that this rule has no federalism implications warranting 
preparation of a federalism assessment.

Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35

    SBA has determined that this rule requires revisions to existing 
recordkeeping or reporting requirements of the Paycheck Protection 
Program (PPP) information collection (OMB Control Number 3245-0407) as 
a result of amendments made to the PPP by the Economic Aid Act and 
implemented in this interim final rule. The revisions will affect the 
PPP Borrower Application Form (SBA Form 2483), the PPP Lender 
Application Form (SBA Form 2484), the Lender Application Form for 
Federally Insured Depository Institutions, Federally Insured Credit 
Unions, and Farm Credit System Institutions (SBA Form 3506), and the 
Lender Application Form for Non-Bank and Non-Insured Depository 
Institution Lenders (SBA Form 3507).
    SBA Form 2483 has been revised to add housing cooperatives, section 
501(c)(6) organizations, destination marketing organizations, and 
certain news organizations to the categories of eligible entities; to 
collect the NAICS code of the applicant; to add additional eligible use 
of proceeds; and to add or revise the certifications to incorporate the 
Economic Aid Act amendments. Changes were made to SBA Form 2484 to 
conform to the changes made to SBA Form 2483. SBA Forms 3506 and 3507 
were revised to extend the term through March 31, 2021; restate the way 
interest rate is calculated; and make clarifying changes for 
consistency with program requirements.
    SBA is developing a process to collect the information necessary 
for eligible borrowers to reapply or request an increase in their PPP 
loan amount as described in this interim final rule.
    SBA has requested emergency approval of the revisions to this PPP 
information collection to enable the Agency to resume the reauthorized 
PPP as quickly as possible. Without such emergency approval, the 
authority for

[[Page 3712]]

the program would expire before the procedural steps, including the 
comment periods generally required by the Paperwork Reduction Act, 
could be completed.

Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) generally requires that when 
an agency issues a proposed rule, or a final rule pursuant to section 
553(b) of the APA or another law, the agency must prepare a regulatory 
flexibility analysis that meets the requirements of the RFA and publish 
such analysis in the Federal Register. 5 U.S.C. 603, 604. Specifically, 
the RFA normally requires agencies to describe the impact of a 
rulemaking on small entities by providing a regulatory impact analysis. 
Such analysis must address the consideration of regulatory options that 
would lessen the economic effect of the rule on small entities. The RFA 
defines a ``small entity'' as (1) a proprietary firm meeting the size 
standards of the Small Business Administration (SBA); (2) a nonprofit 
organization that is not dominant in its field; or (3) a small 
government jurisdiction with a population of less than 50,000. 5 U.S.C. 
601(3)-(6). Except for small government jurisdictions with a population 
of less than 50,000, neither State nor local governments are ``small 
entities.''
    The requirement to conduct a regulatory impact analysis does not 
apply if the head of the agency ``certifies that the rule will not, if 
promulgated, have a significant economic impact on a substantial number 
of small entities.'' 5 U.S.C. 605(b). The agency must, however, publish 
the certification in the Federal Register at the time of publication of 
the rule, ``along with a statement providing the factual basis for such 
certification.'' If the agency head has not waived the requirements for 
a regulatory flexibility analysis in accordance with the RFA's waiver 
provision, and no other RFA exception applies, the agency must prepare 
the regulatory flexibility analysis and publish it in the Federal 
Register at the time of promulgation or, if the rule is promulgated in 
response to an emergency that makes timely compliance impracticable, 
within 180 days of publication of the final rule. 5 U.S.C. 604(a), 
608(b).
    Rules that are exempt from notice and comment are also exempt from 
the RFA requirements, including conducting a regulatory flexibility 
analysis, when among other things the agency for good cause finds that 
notice and public procedure are impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary 
to the public interest. Small Business Administration's Office of 
Advocacy guide: How to Comply with the Regulatory Flexibility Ac. Ch.1. 
p.9. Since this rule is exempt from notice and comment, SBA is not 
required to conduct a regulatory flexibility analysis.

    Authority: 15 U.S.C. 636(a)(36); Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and 
Economic Security Act, Pub. L. 116-136, section 1114 and Economic 
Aid to Hard-Hit Small Businesses, Nonprofits, and Venues Act (Pub. 
L. 116-260), section 303.

Jovita Carranza, Michael Faulkender,
Assistant Secretary for Economic Policy.
[FR Doc. 2021-00451 Filed 1-12-21; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 8026-03-P