The ERC is a legitimate tax credit established to help businesses with the cost of keeping staff employed during the pandemic, enacted by the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, or CARES Act.
But it’s been a target for abuse because the credit qualification is complicated and lucrative. Small business owners often don’t have the resources to understand the IRS’s filing requirements or were not aware that the ERC was retroactively available in 2023. And the payments are attractive — qualified employers can claim up to $26,000 per worker on the payroll between March 12, 2020, and Dec. 31, 2021, a windfall for the ERC companies that get a cut.
“I think that’s certainly a part of it,” Sardar said.
A year ago, the IRS had been warning about abuse related to ERC. In May, it specifically warned against pop-up ERC companies that were luring unqualified small businesses into claiming credits through aggressive promotions — even adding it to the agency’s annual Dirty Dozen scam list.
That came after the IRS criminal investigation division started 122 investigations involving over $1.2 billion of potentially fraudulent ERC claims.
These companies often advertise that they can determine ERC eligibility for a small business within minutes without a discussion with clients, according to the IRS. The companies file the ERC credit on behalf of a small business owner for a fee that is typically a percentage of the tax credit amounts.
“The problem is that while there are totally legitimate CPAs like us around the country who have helped taxpayers with [ERC claims],” Everson said, “there is a pop-up industry where people came in and they started saying, ‘hey! you qualify for this.”
One of the IRS’s primary concerns was that ERC companies were improperly qualifying or over-qualifying small businesses.
The IRS website stated that to be eligible for credits, employers must have payroll employees between March 12, 2020, and Dec. 31, 2021, and experienced a significant decline in gross receipts during the pandemic.
But that’s not all.
Another essential requirement is that a business’s decreasing income is directly related to government mandates or orders, a distinction often overlooked. For instance, a small business that sells event tickets experiencing a revenue downtown after government mandates had been lifted would not qualify for the ERC, Sardar said.
“You can have all sorts of losses, but unless it’s tied to a government action that caused it, you don’t qualify for the ERC,” Sardar said, “[This is] where a lot of the mistakes happened, some of which were just innocent mistakes and some of which were fraudulent mistakes.”
Businesses with no W-2 employees, no significant decline in gross receipts, and no more substantiated nominal impact on the business were other common reasons that clients don’t qualify, according to alliant, a tax advisory firm specializing in tax credits.
“We’ve processed thousands of [ERC returns] and helped taxpayers of different sizes get the money there,” Everson said. “We have also screened out thousands and told taxpayers they don’t qualify.”