How to Report ERC/ERTC Refund on Tax Return in 2026 | Complete Guide

How to Report ERC/ERTC Refund on Tax Return in 2026 | Complete Guide

Learn how to report ERC (Employee Retention Credit) refund on your tax return in 2026. Tax implications, amended returns, and a free tax impact calculator.

๐Ÿ“‹ How to Report ERC/ERTC Refund on Tax Return in 2026

Complete Guide to Employee Retention Credit Tax Reporting & Implications

Last Updated: January 18, 2026 | Reading Time: 12 min | By: OmniCalculator.Space Team

๐ŸŽฏ Key Takeaway

The ERC refund itself is NOT taxable income. However, you must reduce your wage expense deduction by the amount of the credit. This reduction increases your taxable income, resulting in additional tax. You may need to file an amended return (Form 1040-X or 1120-X) for the year you originally claimed the wages.

1. What is the ERC/ERTC?

The Employee Retention Credit (ERC), also called the Employee Retention Tax Credit (ERTC), was a refundable payroll tax credit created during the COVID-19 pandemic to encourage businesses to keep employees on payroll.

  • 2020: Up to $5,000 per employee for the year
  • 2021 Q1-Q3: Up to $7,000 per employee per quarter ($21,000 max)
  • Total Maximum: Up to $26,000 per employee (2020 + 2021)
  • Refundable: Paid as a refund even if no taxes owed

โš ๏ธ IRS Moratorium Notice

The IRS placed a moratorium on processing new ERC claims in September 2023 due to widespread fraud. If you've received an ERC refund, proper reporting is essential. If you claimed ERC improperly, consider the IRS Voluntary Disclosure Program.

2. Do You Pay Taxes on ERC Refunds?

This is the most common question: Is the ERC refund taxable?

โœ… Short Answer

No, the ERC refund itself is not taxable income. However, the IRS requires you to reduce your wage expense deduction by the credit amount. This reduction effectively increases your taxable income, resulting in additional tax liability.

The Tax Impact Explained

  • Direct tax: The ERC check is NOT directly taxed as income
  • Indirect impact: You must reduce wage deductions, increasing taxable income
  • Net effect: You owe tax on the credit amount at your marginal rate
  • Example: $100,000 ERC at 24% tax bracket = ~$24,000 additional tax

๐Ÿ“ Why It Works This Way

Originally: Deducted wages โ†’ Reduced taxable income โ†’ Lower tax

With ERC: Must reduce wage deduction by ERC amount โ†’ Higher taxable income โ†’ Higher tax

You can't "double dip" by deducting wages AND receiving a credit for them

3. How to Report ERC on Your Tax Return

Reporting depends on when you received the ERC and your business structure:

1

Determine the Tax Year

The wage deduction reduction applies to the tax year the wages were paid (2020 or 2021), not the year you received the refund.

2

Reduce Wage Expense

Reduce your wage expense deduction by the ERC amount for the applicable quarter(s). This is done on your income tax return (Form 1040, 1120, 1120-S, or 1065).

3

File Amended Return (If Needed)

If you already filed your 2020/2021 return before claiming ERC, you must file an amended return to reduce the wage deduction and pay additional tax.

4

Report Any Interest

The IRS paid interest on delayed ERC refunds. This interest IS taxable income and must be reported in the year received.

Where to Report by Business Type

Business TypeOriginal ReturnAmended ReturnWhere to Reduce Wages
Sole ProprietorSchedule C (Form 1040)Form 1040-XLine 26 (Wages)
S CorporationForm 1120-SForm 1120-S (amended)Line 7/8 (Compensation)
C CorporationForm 1120Form 1120-XLine 13 (Salaries)
PartnershipForm 1065Form 1065 (amended)Line 9 (Salaries)
Tax-ExemptForm 990Form 990 (amended)Functional expense allocation

4. Tax Impact Formulas

4.1 Additional Tax Liability

๐Ÿ“ Formula: Additional Tax from ERC

Additional Tax = ERC Amount ร— Marginal Tax Rate

Your marginal rate depends on total taxable income

4.2 Net Benefit from ERC

๐Ÿ“ Formula: Net ERC Benefit

Net Benefit = ERC Refund โˆ’ Additional Tax Due

This is what you actually keep after tax impact

4.3 Net Benefit Percentage

๐Ÿ“ Formula: Net Benefit Rate

Net Benefit % = (1 โˆ’ Marginal Tax Rate) ร— 100

At 24% tax rate, you keep 76% of ERC

4.4 Combined Federal + State Impact

๐Ÿ“ Formula: Combined Tax Impact

Total Additional Tax = ERC ร— (Federal Rate + State Rate)

Don't forget state income tax impact

5. ERC Tax Impact Calculator

Calculate how much additional tax you'll owe and your net benefit from the ERC:

๐Ÿงฎ ERC Tax Impact Calculator
ERC Refund
$0
Federal Tax Due
$0
State Tax Due
$0
Tax on Interest
$0
Total Additional Tax
$0
Net Benefit
$0

6. Filing Amended Returns

Most ERC claims require filing an amended income tax return:

When You Need to Amend

  • You filed your 2020/2021 income tax return before receiving ERC
  • You claimed the full wage deduction on the original return
  • You need to reduce wage expenses and pay additional tax

Forms to File

Entity TypeForm to FileDeadline
Individual (Schedule C)Form 1040-X3 years from original due date
C CorporationForm 1120-X3 years from original due date
S CorporationAmended Form 1120-S3 years from original due date
PartnershipAmended Form 1065 + K-1s3 years from original due date

๐Ÿšจ Important: Interest & Penalties

If your amended return results in additional tax, you may owe interest (currently ~8% annually) and potentially penalties for late payment. The IRS calculates interest from the original due date of the return, not when you received the ERC.

7. Worked Examples

Example 1: S Corporation Owner

๐Ÿ“ Scenario

ABC Corp (S-Corp) received a $75,000 ERC refund for 2021 wages. The sole owner is in the 32% federal bracket and lives in a state with 6% income tax.

Step 1: Calculate Federal Tax Impact
Federal Tax = $75,000 ร— 32% = $24,000
Step 2: Calculate State Tax Impact
State Tax = $75,000 ร— 6% = $4,500
Step 3: Calculate Net Benefit
Net Benefit = $75,000 โˆ’ $24,000 โˆ’ $4,500 = $46,500

Result: The owner keeps $46,500 (62%) of the ERC after taxes. They must file an amended 1120-S and amended personal return.

Example 2: Sole Proprietor with Interest

๐Ÿ“ Scenario

A sole proprietor received $30,000 ERC plus $2,500 interest in 2025 for 2020 wages. They're in the 24% federal bracket with 5% state tax.

Step 1: Tax on ERC (wage deduction reduction)
Combined Rate = 24% + 5% = 29%
Tax on ERC = $30,000 ร— 29% = $8,700
Step 2: Tax on Interest (taxable income)
Tax on Interest = $2,500 ร— 29% = $725
Step 3: Total Tax and Net Benefit
Total Tax = $8,700 + $725 = $9,425
Net Benefit = $32,500 โˆ’ $9,425 = $23,075

Result: Must amend 2020 Form 1040 (Schedule C) and report interest on 2025 return.

8. Important Deadlines & Timeline

Tax YearOriginal Due DateAmendment DeadlineStatus
2020April 15, 2021April 15, 2024โš ๏ธ Deadline passed
2021April 15, 2022April 15, 2025โณ Approaching

โš ๏ธ Don't Wait

If you received ERC for 2020 wages, the amendment deadline has passed. Consult a tax professional immediately. For 2021 wages, file your amended return as soon as possible to minimize interest charges.

9. Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • โŒ Not filing an amended return: The wage reduction must be reported
  • โŒ Reporting ERC as income: The credit itself is not income; reduce wages instead
  • โŒ Reducing wrong year: Reduce wages in the year they were paid, not received
  • โŒ Forgetting state returns: State returns must also be amended
  • โŒ Ignoring interest received: IRS interest on ERC IS taxable income
  • โŒ Missing amendment deadline: Limited time to file amendments
  • โŒ Not setting aside tax money: You'll owe significant additional tax

๐Ÿ”— Related Calculators

โ“ Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Do you have to pay taxes on ERC refund?
The ERC refund itself is not directly taxable as income. However, you must reduce your wage expense deduction by the credit amount on your income tax return for the year the wages were paid. This reduction increases your taxable income, resulting in additional tax at your marginal rate. For example, a $50,000 ERC at a 24% tax rate means about $12,000 in additional tax.
Q: How do I report ERC on my tax return?
Reduce your wage expense deduction on your income tax return for the year the qualified wages were paid (2020 or 2021). If you already filed that return, you must file an amended return (Form 1040-X for individuals, 1120-X for corporations). The reduction goes on the wages/salaries line of your tax form. You may also owe interest on the additional tax.
Q: Is the interest on my ERC refund taxable?
Yes, unlike the ERC itself, the interest paid by the IRS on delayed ERC refunds IS taxable income. Report this interest as "Other Income" on your tax return for the year you received it. The IRS should send you a Form 1099-INT for interest over $10.
Q: What year do I report the ERC adjustment?
Report the wage reduction on the tax return for the year the qualified wages were originally paid, NOT the year you received the ERC refund. For example, if you received ERC in 2025 for Q2 2021 wages, you must amend your 2021 tax return. The interest, however, is reported in the year received (2025 in this example).
Q: What if I missed the deadline to amend my return?
The general rule is 3 years from the original filing date to amend. For 2020 returns, this deadline has passed (April 2024). Consult a tax professional immediately as there may be options or you could face penalties. For 2021 returns, the deadline is April 2025. File your amended return as soon as possible to minimize interest charges.

๐Ÿ“š Official Resources