Employee Retention Credits: Reasons for Prolonged Claims
Congress introduced the employee retention credit (“ERC”) back in March 2020, some taxpayers are still making ERC claims today, and others have the ability to do so until April 2025. These protracted solicitations have triggered questions about the validity of recent ones. Some ask, for example, why taxpayers with legitimate ERC claims did not file them right away, on their original employment tax returns. One reason is that the IRS did not issue certain guidance until months after Congress enacted the relevant laws. Another is that some of that guidance had retroactive effect. This meant that taxpayers had to file amended employment tax returns, sometimes months or years after the fact, in order to take advantage of favorable modifications to the ERC rules. This article, the latest in a multi-part series, analyzes changes over time that have led to the continuation of ERC claims.
About Hale E. Sheppard
HALE E. SHEPPARD, Esq. (B.S., M.A., J.D., LL.M., LL.M.T.) is a Shareholder in the Tax Controversy Section of Chamberlain Hrdlicka and Chair of the International Tax Group.
HALE E. SHEPPARD, Esq. (B.S., M.A., J.D., LL.M., LL.M.T.) is a Shareholder in the Tax Controversy Section of Chamberlain Hrdlicka and Chair of the International Tax Group.