American Rescue Plan Act Provides Relief to Individuals and Businesses
On Thursday, March 11, 2021, the American Rescue Plan Act of
2021 (ARPA 2021) was signed into law. This is a $1.9 trillion emergency relief
package that includes payments to individuals and funding for federal programs,
vaccines and testing, state and local governments, and schools. It is intended
to assist individuals and businesses during the ongoing coronavirus pandemic
and accompanying economic crisis. Major
relief provisions are summarized here, including some tax provisions.
Recovery rebates
(stimulus checks)
Many individuals will receive another direct payment from the
federal government. Technically a 2021 refundable income tax credit, the rebate
amount will be calculated based on 2019 tax returns filed (or on 2020 tax
returns if filed and processed by the IRS at the time of determination) and
sent automatically via check, direct deposit, or debit card to qualifying
individuals. To qualify for a payment, individuals generally must have a Social
Security number and must not qualify as the dependent of another individual.
The amount of the recovery rebate is $1,400 ($2,800 if
married filing a joint return) plus $1,400 for each dependent. Recovery rebates
start to phase out for those with an adjusted gross income (AGI) exceeding
$75,000 ($150,000 if married filing a joint return, $112,500 for those filing
as head of household). Recovery rebates are completely phased out for those
with an AGI of $80,000 ($160,000 if married filing a joint return, $120,000 for
those filing as head of household).
Unemployment
provisions
The legislation extends unemployment benefit assistance:
·
An additional $300 weekly benefit
to those collecting unemployment benefits, through September 6, 2021
·
An additional 29-week extension of
federally funded unemployment benefits for individuals who exhaust their state
unemployment benefits
·
Targeted federal reimbursement of
state unemployment compensation designed to eliminate state one-week delays in
providing benefits (allowing individuals to receive a maximum 79 weeks of
benefits)
·
Unemployment benefits through
September 6, 2021, for many who would not otherwise qualify, including
independent contractors and part-time workers
For 2020, the legislation also makes the first $10,200 (per
spouse for joint returns) of unemployment benefits nontaxable if the taxpayer's
modified adjusted gross income is less than $150,000. If a 2020 tax return has
already been filed, an amended return may be needed.
Business relief
·
The employee retention tax credit
has been extended through December 31, 2021. It is available to employers that
were significantly impacted by the crisis and is applied to offset Social Security payroll taxes. As
in the previous extension, the credit is increased to 70% of qualified wages,
up to a certain maximum per quarter.
·
The employer tax credits for
providing emergency sick and family leave have been extended through September
30, 2021.
·
Eligible small businesses can
receive targeted economic injury disaster loan advances from the Small Business
Administration. The advances are not included in taxable income. Furthermore,
no deduction or basis increase is denied, and no tax attribute is reduced by
reason of the exclusion from income.
·
Eligible restaurants can receive
restaurant revitalization grants from the Small Business Administration. The
grants are not included in taxable income. Furthermore, no deduction or basis
increase is denied, and no tax attribute is reduced by reason of the exclusion
from income.
Housing relief
·
The legislation allocates
additional funds to state and local governments to provide emergency rental and
utility assistance through December 31, 2021.
·
The legislation allocates funds to
help homeowners with mortgage payments and utility bills.
·
The legislation also allocates
funds to help the homeless.
Health insurance
relief
·
For those who lost a job and
qualify for health insurance under the federal COBRA continuation coverage
program, the federal government will generally pay the entire COBRA premium for health insurance from April
1, 2021, through September 30, 2021.
·
For 2021, if a taxpayer receives
unemployment compensation, the taxpayer
is treated as an applicable taxpayer for purposes of the premium tax
credit, and the household income of the taxpayer is favorably treated for
purposes of determining the amount of the credit.
·
Persons who bought their own
health insurance through a government exchange may qualify for a lower cost
through December 31, 2022.
Student loan tax
relief
For student loans forgiven or cancelled between January 1,
2021, and December 31, 2025, discharged amounts are not included in taxable
income.
Child tax credit
·
For 2021, the credit amount
increases from $2,000 to $3,000 per qualifying child ($3,600 for qualifying
children under age 6), subject to phaseout based on modified adjusted gross
income. The legislation also makes 17-year-olds eligible as qualifying children
in 2021.
·
For most individuals, the
credit is fully refundable for 2021 if
it exceeds tax liability.
·
The Treasury Department is
expected to send out periodic advance payments (to be worked out by the
Treasury) for up to one-half of the credit during 2021.
Child and
dependent care tax credit
·
For 2021, the legislation
increases the maximum credit up to $4,000 for one qualifying individual and up
to $8,000 for two or more (based on an increased applicable percentage of 50%
of costs paid and increased dollar limits).
·
Most taxpayers will not have the
applicable percentage reduced (can be reduced from 50% to 20% if AGI exceeds a
substantially increased $125,000) in 2021. However, the applicable percentage
can now also be reduced from 20% down to 0% if the taxpayer's AGI exceeds
$400,000 in 2021.
·
For most individuals, the
credit is fully refundable for 2021 if
it exceeds tax liability.
Earned income tax
credit
For 2021 only:
·
The legislation generally
increases the credit available for individuals with no qualifying children
(bringing it closer to the amounts for individuals with one, two, or three or more
children which were already much higher).
·
For individuals with no qualifying
children, the minimum age at which the credit can be claimed is generally
lowered from 25 to 19 (24 for certain full-time students) and the maximum age
limit of 64 is eliminated (there are no similar age limits for individuals with
qualifying children).
·
To determine the credit amount,
taxpayers can elect to use their 2019 earned income if it is more than their
2021 earned income.
For 2021 and later years:
·
Taxpayers otherwise eligible for
the credit except that their children do not have Social Security numbers (and
were previously prohibited from claiming any credit) can now claim the credit
for individuals with no qualifying children.
·
The credit is now available to
certain separated spouses who do not file a joint tax return.
·
The level of investment income at
which a taxpayer is disqualified from claiming the credit is
increased from $3,650 (as previously indexed for 2021) to $10,000 in
2021 (indexed for inflation in future years).