Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 116— - CORONAVIRUS ECONOMIC STABILIZATION (CARES ACT) › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - KEEPING AMERICAN WORKERS PAID AND EMPLOYED › § 9009a
Makes grants to certain live entertainment businesses, movie theaters, relevant museums, and talent agents that lost money because of COVID‑19. The Small Business Administration’s disaster office runs the program and applicants must say they need the money to keep operating. To be eligible, a business must have been fully operating on February 29, 2020 and must show at least a 25% drop in gross earned revenue in one quarter of 2020 compared to the same quarter in 2019 (applications filed on or after January 1, 2021 may use the fourth quarter). The business must be open or plan to reopen and must meet simple venue or operation rules (examples: a defined performance and audience area, sound and lighting, paid tickets, marketing, or, for theaters, an auditorium and projector). Businesses that present sexually explicit live performances or get more than de minimis revenue from pornographic products are excluded. Publicly traded companies, those getting over 10% of 2019 revenue from federal funds, or very large multi‑state or international companies may also be ineligible under limits described in the law. Full‑time equivalent staff count treats 30+ hours/week as 1.0 and 10–<30 hours as 0.5. Initial grants are prioritized. For the first 14 days, grants go to businesses whose April 1–December 31, 2020 revenue is no more than 10% of the same 2019 period. The next 14 days are limited to businesses with that 2020 revenue no more than 30% of 2019. Up to 80% of the program money may be used in that first 28 days. At least $2,000,000,000 is set aside for businesses with 50 or fewer full‑time employees until 60 days after grant awards begin. Supplemental grants may be given if, as of April 1, 2021, a recent quarter’s revenue is 30% or less of the same 2019 quarter. Grant size is the smaller of 45% of 2019 gross earned revenue (or six months of average monthly revenue for businesses that began after January 1, 2019) or $10,000,000; total grants including supplemental cannot exceed $10,000,000. Grants can pay payroll, rent, utilities, certain debt payments incurred before February 15, 2020, worker protection costs, contractor pay (capped at $100,000 per contractor), and other routine business costs. Grants cannot buy real estate, repay loans made after February 15, 2020, be invested or re‑lent, or be used for political contributions. Money covers costs from March 1, 2020 through December 31, 2021 (or through June 30, 2022 if a supplemental grant is received). Unused funds must be returned within one year (or 18 months if supplemental). The SBA must require recordkeeping (employment records 4 years, other records 3 years), perform audits, recover misspent funds, and report oversight plans and monthly audit activity to Congress.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 9009a
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73