Title 15 › Chapter 116— CORONAVIRUS ECONOMIC STABILIZATION (CARES ACT) › 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 hurt by the COVID-19 pandemic. $5,000,000,000 is reserved for businesses that had $500,000 or less in 2019. The other $23,600,000,000 is for other eligible businesses and will be spread out fairly by the Small Business Administration (SBA). Grants are mostly given in the order applications arrive. For the first 21 days, the SBA must give priority to small businesses owned by women, veterans, or socially and economically disadvantaged owners. After 60 days from March 11, 2021, the SBA can give money to any eligible business no matter the size. Applicants must say they need the money to keep operating and that they did not get a grant under the related 9009a program. A grant will generally equal the business’s pandemic-related revenue loss, but a business and its affiliated businesses together cannot get more than $10,000,000, and no more than $5,000,000 per physical location. Any grant money paid based on estimated receipts that turns out to be too much must be returned. Defined terms (one line each): Administrator = head of the SBA; affiliated business = a company you own at least 50% of or control as of March 13, 2020; covered period = February 15, 2020 through December 31, 2021 (or an SBA-set date no later than two years after March 11, 2021); eligible entity = restaurants and similar places open to the public (including airport and Tribal businesses) but not government-run businesses, chains with more than 20 locations as of March 13, 2020, businesses that applied for or got a 9009a grant, or publicly traded companies; pandemic-related revenue loss = the drop in gross receipts in 2020 compared to 2019 with special rules for businesses that were not open all of 2019 or opened in 2020; payroll costs = the usual payroll definition but excluding amounts used for certain tax credits. Allowed uses of grant money during the covered period include payroll; mortgage interest or principal payments (not prepayments); rent (not prepayments); utilities; maintenance and items to add outdoor seating; supplies and protective gear; normal food and beverage costs; supplier costs; general operating expenses; paid sick leave; and other expenses the SBA says are essential. If a recipient does not use the money for allowed costs or permanently closes before the end of the covered period, the unused funds must be returned to the Treasury.
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 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60