Restaurant Revitalization Fund | What’s in It for Restaurants

By BDO Alliance | Alicia Huffman, Ron Reed Jr, Adam Berebitsky

The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, the $1.9 trillion COVID relief package signed into law by President Joe Biden on March 11, 2021, establishes the Restaurant Revitalization Fund (RRF) and provides for several additional benefits for restaurants listed below.

The RRF, which will be administered by the Small Business Administration (SBA), is broadly applicable and is intended to provide relief to various types of food establishments (we use the general term “restaurants” to refer to these businesses).

The RRF will provide $28.6 billion in relief grants to small to midsized restaurants that have been struggling as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Of the total $28.6 billion, $23.6 billion is available for the SBA to award in an equitable manner to different-sized businesses based on annual gross receipts. The remaining $5 billion is available to businesses with gross receipts of $500,000 or less during 2019.

Eligible restaurants may receive a tax-free federal grant equal to the amount of its pandemic-related revenue loss (reduced by any amounts received from PPP first and second draw loans in 2020 and 2021). The grant amount is capped at $10 million per business with a $5 million limit per physical location and may be used to cover eligible expenses retroactively to February 15, 2020.

Estimated Timeline

Although details of the application release date are presently unknown, the National Restaurant Association shared an expected timeline on their March 15, 2021 webinar regarding the RRF:

  • April 2021 – SBA releases rules and applications
  • May/June – 21-day priority period for women-, veteran-, and disadvantaged/minority-owned businesses
  • May/June – RRF open for all eligible restaurants

If the RRF funds have not been exhausted after 60 days, the SBA will have discretion to administer grants to eligible businesses without regard to annual gross receipts.

Are You Eligible?

To be eligible, the applicant must not own or operate more than 20 locations in total as of March 13, 2020, including any affiliated business, regardless of ownership type of the locations and whether those locations do business under the same or multiple names. By definition, an affiliated business is one that has a right to a profit distribution or an equity interest of 50% or more, or contractual authority to control the direction of the business in existence as of March 13, 2020.

Eligible entities are restaurants; food stands; food trucks; food carts; caterers; saloons; inns; taverns; bars; lounges; brewpubs; tasting rooms; taprooms; licensed facilities or premises of a beverage alcohol producer where the public may taste, sample or purchase products; or other similar places of business where patrons go for the primary purpose of being served food or drink.

Publicly traded companies, state or local government-operated businesses, entities that have more than 20 locations (as described above) and restaurants that have a pending application for, or that have received a grant under the shuttered venue operator grant program are not eligible for the RRF grant.

Grant Calculation

An eligible business can receive a grant equal to its pandemic-related revenue loss. The pandemic-related revenue loss is the difference between the business’s 2020 gross receipts and its 2019 gross receipts, reduced by any amounts received from PPP loans.

Eligible businesses that began operations in 2019 will need to annualize their average monthly gross receipts for 2019 and compare them to their annualized monthly gross receipts for 2020.

Eligible businesses that began operations in 2020 will calculate their grant amount by taking the difference between qualified grant expenses and their 2020 gross receipts.

If an eligible business is not yet in operation as of the application date but has incurred eligible expenses, then its grant will be equal to those expenses.

Eligible Expenses

A qualifying RRF grant recipient may use the funds for specified expenses, including:

  • Payroll (not including wages used for the Employee Retention Credit (ERC))
  • Principal or interest on mortgage obligations
  • Rent
  • Utilities
  • Maintenance, including construction to accommodate outdoor seating
  • Personal protective equipment, supplies and cleaning materials
  • Normal food and beverage inventory
  • Certain covered supplier costs
  • Covered operational expenses
  • Paid sick leave
  • Any other expenses the SBA determines to be essential to maintaining operations incurred from February 15, 2020 to December 31, 2021 are eligible

Additional Benefits to the Restaurant Industry in the American Rescue Plan

  • The ERC has been extended through December 2021.
  • The ERC has also been extended to new businesses that started after February 15, 2020 with average annual receipts of under $1 million. For these businesses, the credit cannot exceed $50,000 per quarter.
  • The Families First Coronavirus Response Act Paid Sick and Family Leave tax credit is extended beginning April 2021 through September 30, 2021.

Contact your ATA representative to discuss this assistance relief further. Visit SBA’s website for more information on the Restaurant Revitalization Fund.

This article originally appeared in BDO USA, LLP’s “Selection” blog (Spring 2021). Copyright © 2021 BDO USA, LLP. All rights reserved. www.bdo.com

Stay Up to Date on the Latest
Tax and Accounting News