Claim ERTC For Non-Profits: Free Eligibility Check & Maximum Refund Calculator

Dec 21, 2023

It’s not too late to claim your ERTC rebate, even if you run a church, school, clinic, or other non-profit organization. ERTC Guy makes it easy – and they’ll always help you to claim the maximum refund, which could be up to $26,000 per employee.

I don't know about you, but I've never been able to understand non-profits.

All that work, and they just don't make any cents...

Ba-dum-tiss!

Don't worry, I'm not giving up my day job to become a comedian - I just thought the best way to start off all this good news, was probably with a joke.

To be fair though, maybe that's wrong, this isn't good news - it's amazing news.

Let me give you the bottom line up front.

If you run a non-profit, of any kind, then you could still be eligible for a huge rebate from the federal government, with no strings attached - and now that ERTC Guy has an application service, there's a super easy way to claim it.

Obviously, I'm no expert, I'm just repeating what I was told - so if you'd prefer to get all your facts from someone who is an expert, head over to https://ertcguy.com/employee-retention-tax-credit-for-nonprofits/

The ERTC Guy website explains everything, like what it takes to qualify, how much you can claim, and even how to complete the paperwork.

The coolest thing though, in my opinion, is their free, fast, and no-obligation eligibility checker and rebate calculator - I know, that's a mouthful, right? But it takes almost as long to say the name as it does to use the thing, because it only asks you 10 really simple questions, like "How many employees did you have in 2021?"

With those 10 answers, which took me less than a minute to fill in, ERTC Guy can provide an instant answer about your eligibility, and an estimate for your maximum allowable rebate. Right then and there.

It doesn't matter if your non-profit wasn't eligible way back in 2020, because all the rules have changed since then, and now practically anyone can qualify.

For example, you can now qualify with up to 500 W-2 employees, and it no longer matters if you've already enrolled in the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP). Actually, it's one better than that, if you qualified for PPP loans, then you're a shoo-in for ERTC rebates because the eligibility requirements are practically the same.

The ERTC is way better than the PPP, in case you didn't know. It offers more money, with fewer restrictions, and best of all, it's not a loan.

That's right, unlike the PPP, ERTC rebates are not a loan, they're not a deferral, and they're not something that's going to come back to bite you later - here's why.

Those other programs were meant to give you some temporary relief during the pandemic, but this one was actually meant to help your employees, not you. The government offered to pay a percentage of their wages, as long as business owners kept them on the payroll - and now that debt has come due.

So if you had employees on the payroll, even though you were negatively affected by the pandemic, this is basically free money. It's money the federal government owes to you, so you never have to pay it back, and you can spend it absolutely any way you want, with no restrictions.

Don't worry about not qualifying because you run a non-profit, because as long as you still paid employees, and were still affected by the pandemic, you still qualify. Even schools, churches, clinics, and performing art centers are getting massive rebates.

Just make sure you claim your rebate the smart way - the first step is to take the free eligibility test and let the calculator determine your maximum allowable rebate.

Then it's up to you whether you want to handle the paperwork yourself or let ERTC Guy specialists do it all for you. Either way, their website can explain how to complete the application process, just act fast, because the deadline is sooner than you think.

The free eligibility test, rebate calculator, and claim instructions are all explained at https://ertcguy.com/employee-retention-tax-credit-for-nonprofits/

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