The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act; P.L. 116-136), which was signed into law by President Trump on March 27, 2020, includes direct payments to individuals—referred to in the law as "2020 recovery rebates." The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) refers to the payments issued in 2020 as economic impact payments, whereas some media reports call them "stimulus payments." This Insight provides a brief overview of these direct payments.

The 2020 recovery rebates equal $1,200 per eligible individual ($2,400 for married taxpayers filing a joint tax return) and $500 per eligible child. These amounts phase down for higher-income taxpayers. These payments are automatically issued to households in 2020 if they filed a 2019 income tax return and will generally be received as a direct deposit or check by mail. If a 2019 return has not been filed, rebates will be advanced automatically based on 2018 return information.

On April 1, 2020, the IRS indicated that 2020 recovery rebates will automatically be issued to Social Security beneficiaries and railroad retirees who are not required to file an income tax return, using information from their Social Security benefits statement (SSA-1099) or Railroad retirement benefits statement (RRB-1099). This was a reversal from guidance provided earlier in the week. If these eligible beneficiaries also have dependent children (eligible for the $500 payment), they are directed to provide that information to the IRS directly via the nonfiler portal to receive the child benefit.

On April 15, 2020, the IRS announced that eligible Supplemental Security Income (SSI) recipients will automatically receive their $1,200 payment through "direct deposit, Direct Express debit card, or by paper check, just as they would normally receive their SSI benefits." The IRS anticipates eligible SSI recipients will receive these payments in early May.

On April 17, 2020, the IRS announced that eligible "veterans and their beneficiaries who receive Compensation and Pension (C&P) benefit payments" from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) will also automatically receive the $1,200 direct payment. As with Social Security beneficiaries who do not file tax returns, SSI recipients and recipients of VA benefits with eligible dependent children are directed to provide information on these children to the IRS to receive the $500 payments.

Otherwise eligible individuals who did not file a 2019 or 2018 income tax return, and are not Social Security beneficiaries, SSI recipients, or recipients of VA benefits as described above, will generally not receive the payments automatically in 2020. Instead, these individuals are encouraged to manually provide information to the IRS via the nonfiler portal in order to receive these payments in 2020. More details on administration can be found on the IRS website.

Credit Amount

These direct payments are structured as a one-time refundable tax credit. The credit equals $1,200 per person ($2,400 for married joint filers) for eligible individuals. Generally, an eligible individual is any individual excluding (1) nonresident aliens, (2) individuals who can be claimed as a dependent by another taxpayer, and (3) an estate or trust.

Individuals eligible for the credit will receive an additional $500 for each child that qualifies for the child tax creditgenerally a taxpayer's dependent child that is aged 16 or younger. Individuals cannot receive the $500 amount for older children and adult dependents.

The total credit phases out at a rate of 5% of adjusted gross income (AGI) above $75,000 ($112,500 for head of household filers and $150,000 for married joint returns). An illustration of the amount of the rebate by income level is provided in the figure below.

As with any tax credit, these payments do not count as income or resources for a 12-month period in determining eligibility for, or the amount of assistance provided by, any federally funded public benefit program. In addition, these payments are not taxable.

The credit is a fixed amount until income reaches the phaseout level. Lower-income taxpayers with little or no income tax liability are eligible for a tax credit equal in dollar value to that received by middle-income and upper-middle-income taxpayers. Hence, as a percentage of income, this rebate is largest for the lowest-income recipients. The tax credit phases out at the upper end of the distribution, as shown in the figure above.

Estimates by the Congressional Research Service and the Tax Policy Center suggest these payments will provide significant benefits to eligible low- and middle-income households.

Other Features of the 2020 Recovery Rebates

Advancing the 2020 Recovery Rebates

As previously discussed, the direct payments are structured as a new one-time refundable tax credit that would, without an advancing provision, be claimed on 2020 federal income tax returns, increasing federal tax refunds next year (when 2020 income tax returns will be filed). However, because the law includes an advancing provision, the IRS will issue these payments this year, not next (similar to how direct payments were structured in 2008). To facilitate implementation, the law directs the IRS to use information from a 2019 income tax return, or if not available, a 2018 income tax return, to calculate the payment amount (with special exceptions for nonfilers who were either Social Security beneficiaries or SSI recipients as described above).

The advancing provision allows many eligible recipients to receive the payment in 2020, as opposed to next year. Receiving a recovery rebate in 2020 will not affect a taxpayer's 2020 income tax liability or tax refund. In addition, if, when taxpayers file their 2020 income tax returns in 2021, they find that the advanced credit is greater than the actual credit (e.g., they had a qualifying child based on their 2019 income tax return, but not on their 2020 return), then they will not be required to repay the excess credit. In contrast, if the advanced credit is less than the actual credit (e.g., a qualifying child was born in 2020, and so was not listed on their 2019 return), then taxpayers will be able to claim the difference (as an increased refund) on their 2020 income tax returns.

To expedite payments, the law allows the recovery rebates to be delivered electronically to any account that the taxpayer had authorized to receive a tax refund or other federal payment on or after January 1, 2018. Otherwise, paper checks will be issued.

Nonfilers

Under current law, taxpayers with gross income less than the standard deduction amount are not required to file a federal income tax return. Hence, many low-income individuals and families, including workers without children who do not receive benefits like the EITC or child credit, may not have filed a 2018 or 2019 income tax return. As such, these individuals and families (excluding Social Security beneficiaries, SSI recipients, and recipients of VA benefits, discussed above) would not receive these rebates in 2020, unless they manually provided information to the IRS via their nonfiler portal.