Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 116— - CORONAVIRUS ECONOMIC STABILIZATION (CARES ACT) › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - KEEPING AMERICAN WORKERS PAID AND EMPLOYED › § 9009c
Creates a Restaurant Revitalization Fund with $28,600,000,000 to give grants to restaurants and similar places that serve food or drink. The SBA Administrator runs the program. "Affiliated business" means a business you partly own or control (50% or more) based on arrangements as of March 13, 2020. The "covered period" runs from February 15, 2020 to December 31, 2021, or to a date the SBA sets no later than two years after March 11, 2021. An "eligible entity" includes restaurants, food trucks, bars, tasting rooms, caterers, inns, and similar public food or drink places (including those in airports and Tribal businesses) but not government-run places, firms that owned or ran more than 20 locations on March 13, 2020, businesses that got a certain other COVID grant, or publicly-traded companies. The fund sets aside $5,000,000,000 for businesses with 2019 receipts of $500,000 or less and leaves $23,600,000,000 to be shared fairly among other eligible businesses. Grants are mostly given in the order applications arrive. Applicants must honestly say they need the money to keep operating and that they did not get the other listed grant. For the first 21 days, money is prioritized for small businesses owned by women, veterans, or socially and economically disadvantaged owners. One business and its affiliates can get no more than $10,000,000 total and no more than $5,000,000 per physical location. Grant size equals the business’s pandemic-related revenue loss (usually 2019 receipts minus 2020 receipts, with special rules if the business was not open all of 2019 or opened in 2020). Grant money can pay payroll, mortgage principal or interest (not prepaying principal), rent (not prepaying rent), utilities, maintenance (like outdoor seating or furniture), supplies (including PPE), normal food and drink costs, certain supplier costs, operating costs, paid sick leave, and other essential expenses the SBA allows. If a business gets more than it should, does not spend the money on allowed items, or closes before the covered period ends, it must return the unused funds.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 9009c
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73