Title 15 › Chapter 116— CORONAVIRUS ECONOMIC STABILIZATION (CARES ACT) › Subchapter I— KEEPING AMERICAN WORKERS PAID AND EMPLOYED › § 9009b
Pays a one-time $10,000 payment to certain small businesses in low-income areas that lost more than 30% of their revenue and have 300 or fewer employees, if they applied for a specific SBA loan during the “covered period.” If a business already got an earlier emergency grant before December 27, 2020, it gets whatever extra is needed to reach $10,000. The business must ask the Administrator and provide whatever records (including tax records) are needed to prove it qualifies. The Administrator must verify requests and, for those who got an earlier emergency grant, act within 21 days to finish verification and pay the difference or explain any denial. Businesses do not have to repay earlier emergency grants. Defined terms (one line each): agricultural enterprise — meaning given in section 647(b); covered entity — an eligible business that applied for the loan during the covered period, is in a low-income community, lost over 30%, has ≤300 employees, and generally is not an agricultural enterprise; covered period — defined in section 9009(a)(1) as amended; economic loss — decline in gross receipts over an 8-week span between March 2, 2020 and December 31, 2021 versus a comparable earlier period (with a different rule for seasonal businesses); eligible entity — one eligible for the loan under section 636(b)(2); low-income community — meaning in section 45D(e), title 26. The Administrator will process requests in date order but gives first priority to those who already got emergency grants before December 27, 2020 and second to businesses that applied before that date but missed grants because funds ran out. Loan eligibility limits (including certain 13 CFR rules) apply. The Administrator can use SBA staff and contractors. Up to $20,000,000,000 is authorized through December 31, 2021, with $20,000,000 set aside for the Inspector General. Fraud cases must be filed within 10 years of the offense.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 9009b
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60