Tag Archives: form 7200

FREE Bookkeeping Buds Webinar Recording – Troubleshooting The New ERC Rules

Scroll to the bottom of this post for a link to the full webinar.

As I’ve mentioned in recent posts, one of the main sources of financial relief from the congressional legislation that was finally signed recently is that the Employee Retention Credit (ERC or ERTC) will now be available to businesses who also accepted Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) funds. Not only will eligible businesses be able to claim this moving forward, but they have an opportunity to “scoop up” payroll dollars from 2020 that would have been eligible had it not been for the PPP Loan.

As a reminder, this credit is available to business owners (regardless of size) whose operations have been fully or partially suspended by government order, or who have seen a drop in income of more than 50% compared to the same quarter in the previous year. The credit comprises 50% of up to $10,000 in wages to each employee paid by an eligible employer whose business has been financially impacted by COVID-19. The credit cannot be taken on wages that were paid for by PPP funds — but as long as there is no double-dipping, PPP recipients can claim other wages for the purpose of ERC. It is claimed as a reduction of payroll taxes on quarterly Form 941 (or a prepaid refund on Form 7200). The IRS updated the form on July 1, and a handy breakdown of the new lines can be found here.

For a wonderful in-depth explanation of the Employee Retention Tax Credit, please see Tony Nitti’s two-part Forbes article:
– Breaking Down Changes To The Employee Retention Tax Credit In The New Covid Relief Bill, Part 1
– Breaking Down The Changes To The Employee Retention Credit In The New COVID Relief Bill, Part 2
– Part 2 also links to an earlier article of his that goes thorough the details of calculating the ERC according to the 2020 rules.

Last week, I offered a webinar to members of my favorite professional bookkeeping group, and they have been kind enough to allow me to share the recording here at no charge. The purpose of the session was to explain the credit and the related challenges, and to brainstorm how we might move forward to calculate the totals and claim it for our eligible clients. Our conclusions have been enforced since then:

1. Identify which clients might qualify and make sure their books are up-to-date (even though we are still waiting on a lot of guidance — for example: what receipts are we looking at when we calculate a 50% drop in revenue? Does it include state and local emergency grants?)

Here is the Excel template I used in class to track client eligibility:

2. Reach out to the payroll companies to see what they will need to claim the credit;

3. The likelihood that this will all happen quickly enough to claim the 2020 ERC on the 4Q Form 941 is very slim; plan on filing amendments for Q2, Q3 and Q4 later.


If this or any other posts on the website were useful to you, and your financial situation permits it, please consider contributing to my tip jar. This allows me to continue to provide free accounting resources to small businesses who do not have the funds available to hire a CPA.

Filing Form 7200? Use IRS Dedicated Fax Line

From the IRS e-News for Small Business Issue 2020-13 today, a note encouraging businesses to use a new fax line to file Form 7200. The IRS still is ramping up staff and catching up departments post-quarantine, so in order to get your advance payment as quickly as possible, please follow their instructions and use the dedicated fax line.

(If you are working with a payroll company who is filing Form 7200 for you, confirm they are taking care of it — do not simply assume. I’ve already come across two companies so far who won’t do it. Time to switch payroll companies, in my opinion.)

IRS Form 7200 fax line:
Employers use Form 7200 to request an advance payment of the tax credits for qualified sick and qualified family leave wages and the employee retention credit. The employer tax credits for qualified sick leave wages and qualified family leave wages apply to those wages paid from April 1, 2020, to December 31, 2020.

Businesses should fax the completed form to 855-248-0552.

Due to scheduled maintenance, the 7200 fax line will be unavailable from August 7 at 10 p.m. to August 8 at 7 a.m. ET.


If this or any other posts on the website were useful to you, and your financial situation permits it, please consider contributing to my tip jar. This allows me to continue to provide free accounting resources to small businesses who do not have the funds available to hire a CPA.