ERC claims filed through a PEO are the hardest cases in the program: the PEO’s EIN filed the 941s, the IRS pays the PEO, the disallowance letters go to the PEO — and in most cases only the PEO has standing to sue. Your money, their claim. Every move in these cases runs through that structural fact.
The short version is that co-employment, which made payroll simple, makes ERC recovery complicated. If a Professional Employer Organization filed your quarters on an aggregate Form 941 with your share allocated on Schedule R, four problems follow — and each has a playbook.
Problem 1: You usually can’t sue for your own refund
Refund suits belong to the taxpayer that filed the return and paid the tax — the PEO. Client companies that sued the IRS directly have faced dismissal for lack of standing. The consequence is blunt: on a delayed or denied PEO-filed claim, the litigation lever must usually be pulled by the PEO or with the PEO, which converts a tax problem into a contract-management problem.
Problem 2: The information asymmetry
You may not know whether your claim was filed, for how much, or what the IRS has said — because every notice runs to the PEO. The demand list, in writing: filing confirmation with dates and per-quarter amounts, your Schedule R allocation, every piece of IRS correspondence (especially any Letter 105-C, whose two-year clock runs whether or not you’ve seen it), and the PEO’s written position on how refunds and interest pass through.
Problem 3: The PEO’s incentives are not yours
A PEO managing thousands of client claims rations its attention; your claim’s urgency is yours alone. Where cooperation stalls, the pressure points are contractual — cooperation clauses, implied covenants, and, where a PEO has received and sat on client refunds, breach-of-contract and unjust-enrichment theories against the PEO directly. Litigation-adjacent pressure usually produces movement long before trial.
Problem 4: PEO distress
A refund payable to a struggling PEO is unsecured exposure. If your PEO shows signs of distress, documentation and speed stop being best practices and become the whole strategy.
The playbook
Document the allocation now. Demand the correspondence file. Calendar any disallowance date the moment you learn it. And bring counsel in early — this is exactly the work our ERC litigation practice handles, alongside the responsibility framework and the deadlines on the refund tracker. Book a free 15-minute call — bring your PEO agreement; its cooperation clause is the first thing we’ll read.
ERC and PEO FAQ
Who owns an ERC claim filed through a PEO?
Legally, the claim belongs to the entity that filed the employment tax returns — the PEO, under its own EIN, with client amounts allocated on Schedule R. The economic benefit is yours by contract; the procedural rights largely are not. That gap is the source of every PEO-ERC problem.
What happens if my PEO goes out of business before my refund arrives?
The refund is still payable to the PEO, which makes an insolvent or dissolving PEO a genuine creditor problem: your money arrives into an estate. Documenting your allocation now — before trouble — and moving early with counsel are the only real protections.
Can I make my PEO pursue my denied ERC claim?
Your leverage is contractual, not procedural: the service agreement, its cooperation and pass-through clauses, and where necessary breach-of-contract and unjust-enrichment claims against the PEO itself. Courts have entertained exactly those theories where PEOs sat on client refunds.