Here's the plan for how $349 billion in small-business loans will be administered

On April 3, with much fanfare, the $349 billion “Paycheck Protection Program” will begin to offer loans to small businesses around the country currently facing bankruptcy as the U.S. and other countries fight the global coronavirus pandemic.

“These loans will be forgiven as long as businesses keep paying their workers,” President Trump said on Thursday adding, “on Friday, April 3, that’s when it begins.”

Throughout the week, Trump, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, senior administration officials, and even first daughter advisor to the president, Ivanka Trump, have been talking up the program and how it will help the economy.

Many questions remain – from exactly how the loan process will work in the age of social distancing to whether the banks will have the guidance they need to administer these loans. There’s even a question a whether $349 billion will be enough.

Here’s what we know right now. (Further information on the program is available at treasury.gov/cares and sba.gov/coronavirus.)

Who exactly is eligible for these loans

Loans are designed to cover U.S. businesses with 500 or fewer employees. That also includes nonprofits, veterans organizations, tribal business concerns, and sole proprietorships.

Businesses will be required to verify they were operational on Feb. 15 and that they have been negatively impacted by the coronavirus.

The SBA has provided a sample form to give a sense of what information will be needed. The exact application form will be determined by the financial institution actually administering the loan (more on that below).

ROCKTON, ILLINOIS  - MARCH 24: A normally busy Main Street is deserted as the small businesses that line the business district remain closed after the governor instituted a shelter-in-place order in an attempt to curtail the spread of the coronavirus (COVID-19) on March 24, 2020 in Rockton, Illinois. Rockton is a town of about 7,500 people along the banks of the Rock river in Northern Illinois.  (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Main Street is deserted to curtail the spread of the coronavirus in Rockton, Illinois. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

The business will also need to provide evidence of the size of their payroll. This is key in determining the size of the loan. The loans can be made for up to 2.5 times the average monthly payroll of a business but can’t exceed $10 million per business.

The loans are designed to “provide eight weeks of payroll and certain overhead to keep workers employed,” said Mnuchin.

Where you go to get them

The biggest change in how these government loans will be administered is that you won’t need to go to the government to get them.

Calling the plan an “unprecedented public-private partnership,” Small Business Administrator Jovita Carranza said. The “goal is to position lenders as the single point-of-contact for small businesses – the application, loan processing, and disbursement of funds will all be administered at the community level.”

The lending partners include any existing SBA lender (which includes thousands of banks), as well as any FDIC-insured institution, federally insured credit union, or Farm Credit System institution that is participating.