When it comes to real estate or contracts, we’ll tell you what others won’t.












How The ERC Works
Watch our slide show to understand more about the ERC program and how we can help your business. This program is set to sunset in less than 18 months so claim your right to your funds today!
Why Work With Us?
Never before in our nation’s history has our federal government gone the distance to assist small business owners. Financial assistance is usually reserved for large, multi- national companies. The Pandemic changed all that for better and for worse. But Congress’s recent ERC legislation is a testament to the driving economic force and impact that small business owners have on our country’s economy.
The ERC underwent several technical changes under four major pieces of legislation, including how to determine qualified wages, which employees are eligible, and more. Your business’ specific case might require more intensive review and analysis. After several different pieces of ground breaking laws, the ERC program is complex and might leave you with many unanswered questions.
“I love to demystify complicated real estate and financial legal concepts and problems for people who are frustrated with incompetent or dismissive real estate or banking “professionals.”
Since 1990, David Soble has provided no nonsense legal advice to small businesses, banks, lenders and consumers alike, in the legal areas of finance and real estate, and contracts.
David Soble is a graduate of Michigan State University (’87) and The Ohio State University College of Law (’90). After you speak with David and members of his legal team, you will quicky understand what makes people from all over the nation and the world seek their practical legal and business advice.

David Soble, Founding Attorney
Why Work With Us?
Never before in our nation’s history has our federal government gone the distance to assist small business owners. Financial assistance is usually reserved for large, multi- national companies. The Pandemic changed all that for better and for worse. But Congress’s recent ERC legislation is a testament to the driving economic force and impact that small business owners have on our country’s economy.
The ERC underwent several technical changes under four major pieces of legislation, including how to determine qualified wages, which employees are eligible, and more. Your business’ specific case might require more intensive review and analysis. After several different pieces of ground breaking laws, the ERC program is complex and might leave you with many unanswered questions.
We have decades of experience protecting small businesses. We can help make sense of it all. Our dedicated experts will guide you and outline the steps you need to take so you can maximize the ERC claim for your business.
Since 1990, David Soble has provided no nonsense legal advice to small businesses, banks, lenders and consumers alike, in the legal areas of finance and real estate, and contracts.
David Soble is a graduate of Michigan State University (’87) and The Ohio State University College of Law (’90). After you speak with David and members of his legal team, you will quicky understand what makes people from all over the nation and the world seek their practical legal and business advice.
ERC STATS

Our ERC services include:
- Thorough evaluation regarding your eligibility
- Comprehensive analysis of your claim
- Guidance on the claiming process and documentation
- Specific program expertise that a regular CPA or payroll processor might not be well-versed in
- Fast and smooth end-to-end process, from eligibility to claiming and receiving refunds

Our ERC specialists will interpret highly complex program rules and answer your questions, including:
- How does the PPP loan factor into the ERC?
- What are the differences between the 2020 and 2021 programs and how does it apply to your business?
- What are aggregation rules for larger, multi-state employers, and how do I interpret multiple states’ executive orders?
- How do part-time, Union, and tipped employees affect the amount of my refunds?
FAQs
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Employee Retention Credit?
The Employee Retention Tax Credit is a government tax credit created by the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act. The Employee Retention Credit allows small and medium business owners to receive a tax break for employees they were able to keep on staff during the Coronavirus pandemic.
More specifically, employers eligible for the Employee Retention Credit can receive up to 50% of wages paid to their employees between the dates of March 13th 2020 and December 31st 2020 with a limit of $10,000 per employee.
The ERC was extended by the Relief Act of 2021 to 70% of an employee’s wages per calendar quarter per employee from January 1st 2021 until October 1st 2021, with a limit of $10,000 per employee per quarter.
What industries qualify for ERC?
Many industries can qualify for ERC—the most important thing is that your company meets the qualifications listed above, not that they are in the proper industry or sector.
Some industries that qualify for ERC include education, government contractors, healthcare, life science, hospitality, retail, non-profit, industrial, real estate, construction, technology, and more.
Self-employed individuals do not qualify for ERC. However, industries, where employees were retained due to their ability to work from home, are eligible.
How is the ERC calculated?
For 2021 wages, the Employee Retention Credit can pay you 70% of a single employee’s wages with a quarterly cap of $10,000. For a simple retention credit example, let’s say you have ten employees who make exactly $10,000 a quarter. That means you’d get $7,000 per employee per quarter for a total of $70,000 across all your employees per quarter and $280,000 for the entire year.
For 2020 wages, the Employee Retention Credit can pay you 70% of a single employee’s wages with a yearly cap of $10,000. For the same company of ten employees, you’d make $5,000 per employee for a total of $50,000.
What period does the program cover?
The program began on March 13th, 2020 and continues to September 30th, 2021 for eligible employers.
You can apply for refunds for 2020 and 2021 after December 31st of this year, into 2022 and 2023. And potentially beyond then too.
We have clients who received refunds only, and others that, in addition to refunds, also qualified to continue receiving ERC in every payroll they process through September 30, 2021, at about 30% of their payroll cost.
We have clients who have received refunds from $100,000 to $6 million.
For 2020 wages, the Employee Retention Credit can pay you 70% of a single employee’s wages with a yearly cap of $10,000. For the same company of ten employees, you’d make $5,000 per employee for a total of $50,000.
How do I know if my company qualifies for the ERC?
To qualify for the Employee Retention Credit, your business must fall into one of the following categories:
A disruption in business operations beginning after February 15, 2020 and continued due to the coronavirus pandemic. This includes businesses that are fully or partially suspended by government orders or are unable to operate at normal capacity due to the pandemic.
or
A revenue decline. Your eligibility is largely based on your 2019 records. First, your business must have 500 or fewer employees in 2019 to qualify. Also, your company’s quarterly gross receipts in 2020 and 2021 must be at least 20% lower than the corresponding quarter in 2019. This is to prove your company was financially impacted by the Coronavirus lockdown.
On top of that, you must be a private sector or tax-exempt company that dealt with a partial or full shutdown of operations due to COVID-19.
You do not need a revenue decline to qualify, in fact, many businesses had a revenue increase and still qualified that experienced a disruption in business operations.
Can you still get the ERC?
The Employee Retention Credit is still available to be claimed, as long as you retained employees and are fully qualified. However, since the window of the ERC ended, the credit can only be claimed retroactively. To receive the ERC, you’ll need to fill out Form 941-X, the Adjusted Employer’s Quarterly Federal Tax Return, which allows you to retroactively claim the ERC. This applies to businesses that received PPP (Paycheck Protection Program) loans and those that did not.
You have a three-year deadline from the date of the original filing for which you’re hoping to get a retroactive refund.
Will ERC be extended?
Unfortunately, it does not seem likely that the employee retention credit will be extended. The ERC was already extended twice, once by the Relief Act of 2021 and again by the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021
With the passing of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) in November of 2021, the ERC retroactively ended on October 1st of 2021. While you can still claim the tax credit you’re eligible for from January 1st 2020 through October 1st 2021, it is unlikely there’ll be future financial quarters where the ERC is offered.
What is the difference between PPP and ERC?
The PPP and ERC have the same goal—to support and help businesses that kept their employees during the Covid-19 shutdown. However, they go about it in different ways, with the money received at very different times.
The PPP stands for the Paycheck Protection Program. It is a Small Business Association-backed loan that helped workforces maintain their employees during the economic downturn of the Covid-19 shutdown. The PPP offers first loans, second loans and the potential for loan forgiveness.
These PPP loans are issued by private lenders or credit unions, although the backing of the SBA means, that as long as the loans are used correctly, the entire loan payment can be forgiven.
The ERC is a tax credit. This means it is not a loan and does not have to be paid back. Instead, a tax credit reduces your final tax bill, saving you money (or possibly making you money back with your tax refund) when tax season rolls around.
Do we still qualify if we already took the PPP?
Yes. Under the Consolidated Appropriations Act, businesses can now qualify for the ERC even if they already received a PPP loan. Note, though, that the ERC will only apply to wages not used for the PPP.
The PPP stands for the Paycheck Protection Program. It is a Small Business Association-backed loan that helped workforces maintain their employees during the economic downturn of the Covid-19 shutdown. The PPP offers first loans, second loans and the potential for loan forgiveness.
These PPP loans are issued by private lenders or credit unions, although the backing of the SBA means, that as long as the loans are used correctly, the entire loan payment can be forgiven.
The ERC is a tax credit. This means it is not a loan and does not have to be paid back. Instead, a tax credit reduces your final tax bill, saving you money (or possibly making you money back with your tax refund) when tax season rolls around.
Can you qualify for both the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) and Employee Retention Program (ERC)?
Yes, you can qualify for the Employee Retention Program (ERC) even if you’ve already received a Small Business Interruption Loan under the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP). It is also possible to only benefit from one or the other, and not receiving a PPP loan will not impact your ability to receive the ERC tax credit. SnackNation even outlines the differences in their guide to ERC vs PPP.
However, the credits from the Employee Retention Program can only be used on wages that were not forgiven by the PPP—if the PPP already covered it, they are not eligible for the tax credit.
Do we still qualify if we did not incur a 20% decline in gross receipts?
Your business qualifies for the ERC, if it falls under one of the following:
-A government authority required partial or full shutdown of your business during 2020 or 2021. This includes your operations being limited by commerce, inability to travel or restrictions of group meetings.
-Gross receipt reduction criteria is different for 2020 and 2021, but is measured against the current quarter as compared to 2019 pre-COVID amounts.
Do we still qualify if we remained open during the pandemic?
Yes. To qualify, your business must meet either one of the following criteria:
– Experienced a decline in gross receipts by 20%, or
– Had to change business operations due to government orders
Many items are considered as changes in business operations, including shifts in job roles and the purchase of extra protective equipment.
Is the employee retention credit 50% or 70% of qualified wages?
The answer is, confusingly, both. It all depends on which year you’re trying to receive the Employee Retention Credit. The ERC was started in the CARES Act of March 2020. This gave employers 50% of employee wages for the year, with a cap of $10,000 in wages.
However, the ERC was expanded by the Relief Act of 2021 and expanded again by the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021. This expansion not only extended the availability of ERC, but also added to it. For 2021 wages, business owners could claim 70% of wages per quarter with a cap of $10,000 per employee.
So, the credit is 50% of yearly wages per employee for 2020 and 70% of quarterly wages per employee for 2021.
Are Employee Retention Credits taxable?
The ERC is not taxable income. You won’t need to pay any of your tax credit back once it is received, assuming you follow all the rules and regulations.
However, the ERC will impact your income tax return. Any employer tax credits will result in a reduction in wages that matches the amount of the credit. The impact of this credit needs to be reflected in the year it was received. So, if the reduction was for 2021, your 2021 tax return must reflect these post-credit wages.
What is considered a 'disruption'?
The IRS says to qualify for the ERC your business needs to have experienced “a full or partial suspension of operations due to government order due to COVID-19”. This can mean the complete shuttering of your business, reduced hours, a change in your business offerings, a drop in customers due to the lockdown, and more.
How do I claim employee retention credit on Form 941?
Since the tax credit can now only be claimed retroactively (since the window for ERC ended after the 3rd quarter of 2021), the only way to claim the credit is with tax Form 941-X, the Adjusted Employer’s Quarterly Federal Tax Return. This form amends your former payroll tax return and changes your formerly submitted information to now include the ERC.
The 941-X form is available on the IRS website. The form leads you through the different information you need to provide. Be ready to report all relevant wages and income tax to receive the ERC. The form is long and complex, so be sure to give yourself plenty of time to fill it out and ensure the information is correct to avoid an ERC scam—there’s a lot of money on the line, after all.
How long does it take to get the Employee Retention Credit?
According to the IRS, you can expect reimbursement between six and ten months after you filed your 941-X form. However, current filers report that reimbursement can be as soon as ONE month with an average of three to five in 2022.
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EXCELLENT Based on 330 reviews Posted on Roger Cottingham2025.11.06.Trustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. This company allows you to have peace of mind, Not worry about the laws that are associated the I was having.Posted on Felicia Young2025.11.03.Trustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. I would like to thank the David Soble Law firm for alllll the assistance they provided me. All the staff were very professional, patient and supportive. Once again, David, Thomas and Andrew thank YOU so very much for your time and thoughtfulness with also handling my mom’s concerns. I am very thankful! FeliciaPosted on Roger Ghazali2025.10.17.Trustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. This whole firm is a carefully calculated scam company. Beware and stay away. He charges for every word he utters to you through hidden fees. He ultimately dropped my father’s case at the worst time possible. Blaming my father for being senile which is partially true but that doesn’t free him of having an unlawful practice. He was actually bought out by the person we were suing which is illegal and could get him disbarred. Haven’t filed a grievance yet but may still do that. He also is super mean and I quote yells for “impact” to his customers. STAY AWAY!!!!!!!!!!! WE WASTED THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS TO ULTIMATELY BE SOLD OUT. He also made sure to cash the last payment before dropping our case. After which he agreed to a payment plan.. HE IS A CON ARTIST!!!Posted on Paul Caruana2025.10.08.Trustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Thomas Rouke represented us in a difficult land situation. I found him to be extremely professional and time conscious with our matter. We will definitely call Thomas and Soble Law if the need arises in the future.Posted on Kimberly Allen2025.10.08.Trustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Great experience AND RESULTS! Thank you to David and his team!!Posted on Billy Keene2025.10.07.Trustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. We all need a great attorney every once in a while, and I would like to refer David Soble to anyone who is looking to be represented by an incredibly knowledgeable, mature, and solid attorney. I would refer him to my closest friends without any reservations at all!Posted on Maria s2025.10.05.Trustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Start with Soble Law. I couldn’t believe how quickly my issue was resolved, and relayed to me in plain terms. David knew exactly what issue I was having and in about 30 seconds spelled out all of the steps and likely outcome. I had been working with another lawyer for months to get part of the answer. His knowledge base is just that much more immense and that is what you are looking for. The staff I interacted with was also super helpful, efficient and respectful. So start here and go in a straight line. Legal issues are stressful. Leave that to someone extremely competent who will get back to you instantly with full answers.Posted on Cyrus Malhotra2025.09.26.Trustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Amazing attorney! Very knowledgable staff, very professional! Highly recommend!Posted on Greg Kuula2025.09.22.Trustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Mr. Soble was very easy to contact. We were given great advice on the problem we presented to him. His firm was very friendly and professional in our contacts with them, and Mr. Soble himself. He took his time to explain the pro’s and con’s of the issue we had, and how best to proceed. Would highly recommend, as this is the second time we contacted him, and received sound advice and action both times.Verified by TrustindexTrustindex verified badge is the Universal Symbol of Trust. Only the greatest companies can get the verified badge who has a review score above 4.5, based on customer reviews over the past 12 months. Read more