DE Relief Grants gave Delaware small businesses and nonprofits access to funds to cover expenses and provide relief related to COVID-19 .
The nearly $200 million program was a joint initiative from the State and New Castle County.
Find more information on DE Relief Grants and expense reporting required by businesses below.
DE Relief Grant Recipients
All DE Relief Grant recipients must submit proof of all relevant expenditures in order for the grant to be forgiven. If a business does not provide documentation for all eligible expenses or the business made purchases that were not eligible under the grant guidelines, the grant must be paid back to the state with interest applied.
Please review our How-To Manual for reporting expenses and refer to our in-depth Frequently Asked Questions for more information on reporting expenses. If you need guidance on how to rename a file for expense reporting purposes, please refer to these instructions.
Businesses may include any expense permitted by the Federal and State Guidance regarding the Coronavirus Relief Fund which was properly documented and incurred within the covered period as an authorized expense for DE Relief Grant funds. For guidance on what expenses are eligible under the CRF and when the covered period concluded, please visit: CRF-Guidance-Federal-Register_2021-00827.pdf (treasury.gov) and Coronavirus Relief Fund | U.S. Department of the Treasury.
Businesses are permitted to provide the Division a notarized affidavit identifying qualifying expenses for which they may have inadvertently lost or destroyed supporting documentation. To download a copy of the affidavit, please visit the Division of Small Business portal at https://dsbservice.delaware.gov. Once the affidavit is signed and notarized, you can upload it into the portal. For more information, view our instructional video below.
You can log in to your account below to complete the expense reporting process.
All grants issued to for-profit businesses must be closed out by December 31, 2021. In order to close out the grant, a business must submit proof of all relevant expenditures along with federal tax returns for calendar year 2020 that show a revenue decrease relative to 2019. If the business does show a profit for the year but can show a 25% decrease in one quarter year-over-year (for example: revenue decreased 25% in Q1 2020 compared to Q1 2019), they are still eligible for forgiveness of the grant.* Businesses in disproportionately impacted industries who opened after 1/1/19 do not need to show a decrease. The below industries are designated as disproportionately impacted:
Businesses with NAICS code on their 2019 tax returns starting with the following sets of two numbers:
Businesses with NAICS code on their 2019 tax returns starting with the following sets of four numbers:
If a business does not provide documentation for all eligible expenses or the business made purchases that were not eligible under the grant guidelines, the grant must be paid back to the state with interest applied.
*Businesses who experienced a decrease in revenue must provide a certified letter from a CPA confirming this decrease.
All businesses who received a DE Relief Grant should refer to their grant agreement for a full listing of expenses they were approved for under the grant. Exhibit A of the grant agreement outlines approved expenses for each business.
For most expenses to be considered eligible, they must be incurred between April 1, 2020 and December 31, 2021.
Gather the following documents, which you will need to submit as part of your expense reporting:
The receipts and other documentation that you upload must equal the original grant amount your business was approved for as well as any bonus amount you received. (For example, if your company was approved for $100 for the original grant and you were approved for a $10 bonus, your receipts must total $110.)
All businesses who received a DE Relief Grant should refer to their grant agreement for a full listing of expenses they were approved for under the grant. Exhibit A of the grant agreement outlines approved expenses for each business.
An eligible expense is an expense the business incurred due to COVID-19 that it would not have expected to incur during the regular course of business. An eligible expense must fall under one of the following categories:
For additional information on what expenses are eligible and how to report them correctly, please refer to the In-Depth Q&A on Expense Reporting.
The following broad expense categories are considered ineligible uses of funds, though this list is also not intended to be exhaustive:
*These expenses may have been approved for the use of bonus funds. Refer to your grant agreement for more information or contact a Regional Business Manager for clarification.