SBA Announces New EIDL Advance Guidelines

On March 29, 2020, following the passage of the CARES Act, the SBA provided small business owners and non-profits impacted by COVID-19 with the opportunity to obtain up to a $10,000 Advance on their Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL). The Advance is available as part of the full EIDL application and will be transferred into the account you provide shortly after your application is submitted. To ensure that the greatest number of applicants can receive assistance during this challenging time, the amount of your Advance will be determined by the number of your pre-disaster (i.e., as of January 31, 2020) employees. The Advance will provide $1,000 per employee up to a maximum of $10,000.

You may be eligible for another loan program, the Paycheck Protection Program, which is available through participating lenders. Below is a comparison of the two loan programs:                                              

PURPOSE

Paycheck Protection Program: Forgivable if used for payroll (minimum of 75% of the funds received) and the remaining for certain operating expenses (amount of any EIDL advance is not forgivable)

Full EIDL Loan: To meet financial obligations and operating expenses that could have been met had the disaster not occurred (amount of any EIDL advance is forgiven)

TERMS

Paycheck Protection Program: Up to $10 million, 1% interest rate,

EIDL Loan: Up to $2 million, 3.75% for businesses, 2.75% for non-profits

FORGIVABLE

YES - Paycheck Protection Program

NO – EIDL Loan

YES – EIDL Advance

MATURITY

Paycheck Protection Program: 2 years

EIDL Loan: 30 years

FIRST PAYMENT DUE

Paycheck Protection Program: Deferred 6 months

EIDL Loan: Deferred 1 year

Robert Martin