This page will be updated continuously to reflect the most recent information. This page was last updated on April 27, 2021.
Overview
Congress has passed several rounds of financial assistance and relief for small businesses in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, including most recently the American Rescue Plan. In addition to providing more funding for general small business relief, the American Rescue Plan also includes a new grant program for restaurants and other food and drinking establishments impacted by the pandemic.
*** WHAT IS NEW IN THE AMERICAN RESCUE PLAN ***
The American Rescue Plan provides $29 billion nationwide for a new Small Business Administration (SBA) grant program specifically for restaurants and other food and drinking establishments impacted by the pandemic.
*** DETAILS ON PROGRAM OPENING ***
SBA will open the program to applications on Monday, May 3, 2021, at 6am HST / 12 noon EDT. Registration for the application portal will begin on Friday, April 30. Please visit SBA's website for a program guide and sample application.
SBA will accept applications from all eligible applicants starting May 3, but during the program’s first 21 days of operation, it will only process and fund applications from priority applicants (see “Distribution of Grants” below).Registration with SAM.gov is not required. DUNS or CAGE identifiers are also not required. Eligible entities may apply directly with SBA or through SBA-recognized Point of Sale (POS) vendors. Participating POS providers include Square, Toast, Clover, and NCR Corporation (Aloha). If an applicant is working with a POS vendor, they do not need to register beforehand on the SBA’s portal.
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Eligible Grant Recipients
- Restaurants;
- Food stands, trucks, or carts;
- Caterers;
- Bars or lounges;
- Saloons, inns, or taverns;
- Brewpubs, tasting rooms, taprooms, or other licensed facilities or premises of a beverage alcohol producer where the public may taste, sample, or purchase products; and
- Similar businesses where patrons assemble for the primary purpose of being served food or drink.
This includes entities located in airport terminals and Tribally-owned concerns.
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To be eligible, bakeries, brewpubs, tasting rooms, taprooms, breweries, microbreweries, wineries, and distilleries must provide documentation with their application showing that on-site sales to the public comprised at least 33 percent of gross receipts in 2019.
- On-site sales include sales of food and/or beverage that were consumed on the applicant’s premise, were purchased at the applicant’s premise to-go, were purchased online and picked up from the applicant’s premise, or were delivered directly to a consumer for use.
- These sales must be only to consumers and no wholesale sales may be counted towards the 33 percent revenue number.
- Restaurants and bars are presumed to have on-site sales to the public comprising at least 33 percent of gross receipts in 2019, and do not need to provide additional documentation.
- For businesses that opened in 2020 or have not yet opened, the applicant’s original business model should have contemplated at least 33 percent of gross receipts in on-site sales to the public.
The following entities are not eligible:
- State or local government-operated businesses;
- Entities that own or operate (together with any affiliated business) more than 20 locations as of March 13, 2020, regardless of whether those locations do business under the same or multiple names;
- Publicly-traded companies; or
- Entities that have received a Shuttered Venue Operators (SVO) grant, or have a pending application for an SVO grant.
Grant Amount
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The grant is equal to the business’s pandemic-related revenue loss: 2019 gross receipts minus 2020 gross receipts. Note: businesses are required to reduce their pandemic-related revenue loss by any amounts received under the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP).
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If the eligible entity was not in operation for the entirety of 2019, the difference between:
- The product obtained by multiplying average monthly gross receipts in 2019 by 12; and
- The product obtained by multiplying average monthly gross receipts in 2020 by 12; or
- An amount based on a formula determined by the SBA at a later date.
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If the eligible entity was not in operation for the entirety of 2019, the difference between:
- The maximum grant size is $10 million per entity, limited to $5 million per physical location.
Distribution of Grants
- $5 billion of the $28.6 billion total is earmarked for the smallest businesses. Defined as those with 2019 gross receipts of $500,000 or less.
- The remaining $23.6 billion is available for SBA to award grants in the order in which applications are received, but in an equitable manner based on applicants’ annual gross receipts.
- During the program’s first 21 days of operation, SBA will give priority to applications from businesses owned and operated by women, veterans, and socially and economically disadvantaged individuals (as defined in 15 U.S.C. 637(a)(4)(A)).
Use of Funds
Grant funding can be used for a wide variety of expenses, including:
- Payroll costs;
- Payment of principal or interest on any mortgage obligation (not including prepayment of principal);
- Rent, including rent under a lease agreement (but not including prepayment of rent);
- Utilities;
- Maintenance expenses, including construction to accommodate outdoor seating and walls, floors, deck surfaces, furniture, fixtures, and equipment;
- Supplies, including protective equipment and cleaning materials;
- Food and beverage expenses within the scope of normal business practice;
- Covered supplier costs;
- Operational expenses;
- Paid sick leave; and
- Any other expenses the SBA determines to be essential to maintaining the eligible entity.
Applicant Certification
Applicants must certify that the uncertainty of current economic conditions makes the grant request necessary to support ongoing operations, and that they have not applied for an SVO grant.
Tax Treatment
- The ARP exempts SBA restaurant grants from gross income for tax purposes, and provides that such exclusion will not result in a denial of deduction, reduction of tax attributes, or denial of increase in basis.
- For partnerships and S corporations, the grant amount is treated as tax-exempt income for purposes of sections 705 and 1366 of the Internal Revenue Code, and the bill directs the Secretary of Treasury to prescribe rules for determining a partner’s distributive share of amounts received through the restaurant grant.