SAIM10070 - Relief for interest paid: interest in excess of a reasonable commercial rate: examples
Interest in excess of a reasonable commercial rate: examples
Example 1
A loan of £100,000 is taken out for 10 years at a rate of
7% (considered to be a reasonable commercial rate)
The loan agreement requires the interest for the entire
period £70,000 (£100,000 x 7% x 10 years) to be paid
£50,000 in year 1, £15,000 in year 2 and £5,000 in
Year 3.
In year one the ‘reasonable commercial amount of
interest’ would be £7,000 (£100,000 x 7%) and this
would be the amount allowed for relief. The disallowed amount of
interest, £43,000 (£50,000 - £7,000) is
‘lost’ and will attract no relief now or in the future.
In year two the ‘reasonable commercial amount of
interest’ for that year would be £7,000. Since the loan
has now existed for more than one year this amount is added to all
the interest
relieved in previous periods, £7,000 giving a
total of £14,000 for the two years.
£7,000 has already been relieved in Year 1 leaving
£7,000 to be relieved in Year 2, therefore £8,000
(£15,000 - £7,000) is disallowed in Year 2 and lost.
In Year 3 the interest paid of £5,000 is added to the
interest relieved so far £14,000 giving a total of
£19,000. This is less than £21,000 (£7,000 x 3) so
all the interest paid in the year, £5,000, is allowed.
In Years 4 – 10 no interest is paid and no relief is
due.
Doing the calculation for each year ensures that where the
interest paid in a particular tax year plus the interest paid in
earlier years represents no more than a reasonable commercial rate
over the whole period to that point, then that interest will be
allowable even if it is (at that point) at a rate above a
reasonable commercial amount.
Example 2
John borrows £100,000 for 10 years on terms under which no
interest is paid in the first year, the rate of interest in the
second year is 5%, and in the third and subsequent years is 8.125%.
Supposing a reasonable commercial rate of interest is still 7%.
In Year 1 no interest is paid and no interest is due.
In Year 2 he pays £5,000 (£100,000 x 5%) which is
added to £0 paid in Year 1. The resulting figure of
£5,000 is less than £14,000 (£100,000 x 7% x 2) so
all the interest is allowed.
In Year 3 he will have paid an aggregate of £13,125
(£0 + £5,000 + £8,125) which is less than
£21,000 (£7,000 x 3) and therefore all the interest he
paid in the year, £8,125, is allowed.
Years 4 -10 if these steps are repeated for these later
years you will see that all the interest paid in these years
(despite being at 8.125%) will be allowable. By year 10 interest of
£61,875 will have been allowed in previous years (all the
interest paid) and the interest in that year, £8,125 will
bring the total paid to £70,000. As this does not exceed
£70,000 (£7,000 x 10) all the interest is relievable.
