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Borrowers Will Be Required to Repay Amounts of PPP Loans Made In Excess of Amounts Actually Allowed Under the Program, Even if Due to Lender Error

The SBA has issued a procedural notice[1] that clarified that borrowers who received loans in excess of the amounts that were allowed under PPP are going to be held responsible for repaying the excess amount of the loan.

A number of borrowers have reported being approved for PPP loans in excess of the amounts that were allowed under SBA guidance in the original program.  The problem was especially prevalent for loans early in the PPP program due to both:

  • Lender confusion regarding how the program provided for under the law worked, resulting in different lenders taking conflicting positions on the maximum loans for which borrowers could qualify and

  • Borrowers, also having trouble interpreting the provisions, came to differing conclusions about what made up “payroll costs” for purposes of applying for the loans.

The situation was made worse as various third parties attempted to provide guidance on how to compute these amounts.  Even when such guidance made clear that this was an interpretation only and the SBA might come out with a differing interpretation, users often paid little heed to such warnings and used the worksheets and other tentative guidance.

On top of all of that confusion, early in the program it became clear the demand for loans would be far in excess of the amount that Congress had appropriated—thus, it appeared that borrowers who waited for clearer and consistent guidance likely would find no loans available for them once that guidance appeared.

Not surprisingly, many borrowers in that environment were approved for a maximum loan that was not the actual maximum loan for which the borrower qualified.  In some cases borrowers were approved for amounts that were less than what was actually the maximum the borrower should have qualified for, while in other cases the borrower ended up with approval for a loan in excess of what the law allowed.

It is that second category that the SBA procedural notice addresses.  Note that the guidance covers only errors that were made in good faith. This implies that borrowers and lenders are not going to be able to get special treatment just because they did the best they could—rather, the excess loan is not going to be subject to forgiveness.

An excess loan amount error is a borrower or lender error made in good faith that caused a borrower to receive a PPP loan amount that exceeds the borrower’s correct maximum loan amount under the CARES Act and the Economic Aid Act.[2]

The notice provides that such excess loan amounts are not subject to forgiveness:

A borrower may not receive loan forgiveness for any amount that exceeds the correct maximum loan amount permitted by statute for that borrower. This is true whether the excess loan amount was caused by borrower error or lender error.[3]

If such an error is identified by the lender or borrower, the lender is directed to deny forgiveness on such excess loan amount:

When preparing or reviewing a loan forgiveness application, if a borrower or lender identifies an error that resulted in a borrower receiving a larger PPP loan than the borrower was eligible to receive, the lender must issue a decision to SBA denying forgiveness for the amount that exceeded the borrower’s correct maximum loan amount.[4]

The notice also makes clear that if the error is discovered after the lender has sent the forgiveness decision on to the SBA, even if the SBA has already approved that decision and paid off the loan, the SBA must be immediately informed.  If the borrower had already been notified that the entire loan was forgiven, the lender will also need to inform the borrower of the change in the situation.[5]

The notice concludes by noting the borrower will have to immediately begin repaying the excess loan once the situation comes to light:

If the lender or SBA, as applicable, determines a borrower was ineligible for any portion of its loan amount, forgiveness will be denied for the ineligible portion and the borrower must begin making payments on the remaining loan amount. Any unforgiven loan amounts remain obligations of the borrower, even if the borrower was ineligible to receive some or all of the loan.[6]


[1] "Paycheck Protection Program Excess Loan Amount Errors," SBA Procedural Notice, January 15, 2021, https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/2021-01/5000-20078_0.pdf (retrieved January 17, 2021)

[2] "Paycheck Protection Program Excess Loan Amount Errors," SBA Procedural Notice, January 15, 2021, p. 1

[3] "Paycheck Protection Program Excess Loan Amount Errors," SBA Procedural Notice, January 15, 2021, p. 2

[4] "Paycheck Protection Program Excess Loan Amount Errors," SBA Procedural Notice, January 15, 2021, p. 2

[5] "Paycheck Protection Program Excess Loan Amount Errors," SBA Procedural Notice, January 15, 2021, p. 2

[6] "Paycheck Protection Program Excess Loan Amount Errors," SBA Procedural Notice, January 15, 2021, p. 4