Skip to content

Paycheck Protection Program Loans May Be Taxed in Massachusetts

Paycheck Protection Program Loans May Be Taxed in Massachusetts

February 3, 2021 Last Edit: March 20, 2026

Paycheck Protection Program Loans May Be Taxed in Massachusetts

Massachusetts business may face taxes on their forgiven PPP loan amounts if the state of Massachusetts does not act quickly. Due to the way Massachusetts conforms to the federal tax code, businesses that file as pass-through entities (LLCs, S-Corps, Partnerships etc.) will be taxed by the state on the forgiven loan amounts as it will be treated as taxable income. However, businesses that file as corporations will not be taxed by the state.

NFIB spoke out last fall about the need to remedy this situation as many small business owners sought PPP loans as a way to stay afloat during the state mandated shutdown. Businesses accepted the loans expecting full forgiveness as long as the adhered to the loan’s stipulations. It would be patently unfair to tax small businesses on those forgiven loan amounts.

In last session’s Senate version of the economic development bill, language was included to ensure the loans would not be taxed. Unfortunately, this language did not make it into the final bill.

Earlier this month, Senators Lesser, Lewis, and O’Connor refiled the language as Senate Docket No. 172 to attempt to right this wrong. Several dozen lawmakers signed on to co-sponsor this bill.

We urge you to contact your lawmakers using our Action Alert, asking them to support SD172 on behalf of small businesses: https://www.votervoice.net/NFIB/21/campaigns/79304/respond

Get to know NFIB

NFIB is a member-driven organization advocating on behalf of small and independent businesses nationwide.

Receive our newsletter and email notification
Knowledge is power. Let us help you stay informed with breaking legislative news, regulatory updates, business tips, and more.

Related Articles

The New York State Capitol Building in Albany, home of the New York State Assembly.
Related
May 27, 2026
NFIB’s Reaction to Final FY 2027 New York State Budget
Small businesses commend Governor Hochul for holding the line on tax increases.
Read More
United States Capitol, Washington DC
Related
May 26, 2026
New NFIB Op-Ed: Unleash Small Business Growth in Additional Reconciliation Bill
New package should bolster small business success with crucial tax, regulatory, and healthcare reforms
Read More
Related
May 22, 2026
Millionaire Tax, New Mandates Mark Another Tough Session for State’s Small Businesses
Despite setbacks, NFIB defeated 90% of bills most harmful to small businesses
Read More
Related
May 20, 2026
Post-Primary Comment on the Defeat of Measure 120
Voters send clear message: State government should live within its means
Read More

© 2001 - 2026 National Federation of Independent Business. All Rights Reserved. Terms and Conditions | Privacy Policy | Accessibility