Restaurant Revitalization Fund: Are You Ready?

It’s almost here! The SBA Restaurant Relief Fund will begin accepting applications on Monday, May 3 at 11 am Central Time. Are you ready? What should you be doing to prepare?

To our surprise, the SBA announced last week that all eligible restaurants should apply the moment the portal opens on Day One, regardless of whether they are in the priority groups or not. Those not eligible for review in the first 21 days will be time-stamped and reviewed first-come-first-served in the following period. Therefore, if you are a restaurant owner of any type, make sure to take these steps between now and Monday morning if you haven’t already. Don’t wait until the portal opens to get started — be prepared in advance!

First, calculate your potential grant amount to make sure you are eligible. Do not include state and local Covid-19 grants, or PPP funding, in “gross receipts”. For my clients, I recommend you use “gross receipts minus returns and allowances” on Line 1c (Line 3 for Schedule C filers) of your business tax return. The financial relief, by contrast, should either be on the “Other Income” line (state & local grants), or not entered at all (in the case of PPP), as they are considered non-operating income. Ask your tax preparer if you are unsure.

Follow the instructions in this chart to estimate your RRF grant amount. If you were in business prior to 2019, use Calculation #1 — this will be the vast majority of restaurants.

If the amount is less than $1000 (or negative), you are not eligible. Although it’s frustrating that funding will not be available, at least you don’t have to go through the rest of the steps — silver lining!

Presuming your result is $1000 or more, please take the next steps seriously. Funding for this program is not sufficient for the number of applicants. This is your chance to be ahead of the game.

  1. Watch a recent SBA webinar that walks you through the registration and application process.
  2. Review this short, handy step-by-step guide.
  3. Download and review screenshots from the portal.
  4. Register for an SBA RRF Portal account (unless you are applying through your Square/Toast POS). Do not wait until the program opens to register — the system opened up for registration this past Friday at 8 am Central.
    • Note: you will need a cell phone to get a Two-Factor Authentication code; this is required when setting up an account.
    • This registration is independent of any other SBA account you might have — the RRF portal is a separate website/login.
    • Bookmark this site and make sure you have everything you need to easily log in when the program goes live.
  5. If applying through your Square or Toast Point of Sale (POS) system, familiarize yourself with their guidelines. We recommend you only use this option if 1) nearly all of your gross receipts run through the POS; or, 2) your 2020 tax return is not available.
  6. Read the SBA RRF Program Guide.
  7. Read the definitions for “priority groups” (women-owned, veteran-owned, socially-or-economically-disadvantaged individual-owned) — especially for those with more than one owner — to determine if you can self-certify or not.
  8. Download and fill out the sample application.
    • You will need to know things like your business entity type, tax ID #, PPP Draw 1 & 2 loan numbers, bank ACH info, owner percentages and tax ID #s, and your very first day of sales.
    • As mentioned above, if you were in business prior to 2019, you should use Table 1 and ignore Tables 2 and 3.
    • Use this filled-out application as your cheat-sheet when filling out the online application when the system goes live.
  9. Make sure you have all your supporting documentation saved to a single, easily-accessible folder on your computer, and that you have clearly named each file. Acceptable file formats are: PDF, JPG, GIF, TIFF or PNG.
    • Preferred proof of gross receipts decline will be your 2019 and 2020 tax returns (unless you are applying through Square/Toast).
      Your 2019 tax return and your 2019 & 2020 POS reports are also acceptable, though they may not include all your gross receipts, so we recommend using tax returns if you have them.
    • In addition, you may need the most recent three months of bank statements for the account that will be receiving the grant money, if the “auto-connect your bank” option does not work for some reason.
    • Clarity, precision, and organization is what’s important — not volume. Remember that a real human being will review the application at some point. Feel free to include a cover page that explains how you have organized things and what is where, the naming structure, etc.

If you have everything ready-to-go, it should only take 20-25 minutes to complete the application online when the system goes live.

Tips and notes:

  • Use the most modern browser possible — the current version of Chrome, Edge or Safari.
  • There are hover-tips practically everywhere on the portal that are really helpful, as well as an excellent searchable “KnowledgeBase” in the lower-right-hand corner of the website.
  • The SBA recommends you use the “auto-connect your bank” option instead of manually entering your ACH info — it will move through the process much faster and you will not need to upload three months of bank statements. You will be asked to select which of the bank accounts (if you have more than one) to link.
  • When signing, make sure your Title fits the entity type. (e.g., “Owner” rather than “CEO” for a sole proprietor).
  • Digital signature via Docusign at the end — if it doesn’t work, make sure your antivirus is disabled or try another browser.
  • There’s going to be personally-identifying info (PII) during registration and/or signing to make sure you are the person you say you are, so make sure to fill this return out yourself, rather than have your CPA or anyone else do it. Feel free to have them help you prepare the application that you will use for reference ahead-of-time instead if you need assistance.
  • You will get a confirmation ID. Please take a screenshot of this page.
  • If you realize afterwards that you made a mistake, call the call center and they will delete your application and you will have to start over.
  • The SBA will send a message through the portal’s message center if there are follow-up questions. You will receive an email each time there is a message; you do not need to log back in until you get a status notification, but it might be a safe thing to do in case something gets stuck in spam.
  • You can reach the SBA RRF call-center at 1-844-279-8898 for any issues or questions.

And finally… a few words to set expectations: I have every confidence that the SBA RRF portal servers will go down at some point. Instead of asking non-priority applicants to wait three weeks, they are asking literally every eligible restaurant in the country to apply at the same moment. The SVOG site went down on the first day and it took weeks for them to re-open it — and there are far more restaurants out there than performance venues. Obviously the SBA learned from that experience, so I am hopeful they are addressing these concerns… but it seems a staggered, time-stamped approach would have been safer. All that said, just do what the SBA recommends and apply in the first few minutes, but do not be surprised if you have to click “refresh” all day long. Maybe don’t make any other plans for the day just in case. For up-to-the-minute info, check twitter — either search for RRF or #RRF — this was an amazing community for the SVOG folks to come together for information and support when their issue occurred.

Good luck, everyone!


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