SAIM9040 - Deduction of tax: annual payments and yearly interest: overview
The obligation to deduct tax: background
A long standing feature of the tax system has been the
obligation imposed on persons paying certain types of interest, and
annual payments and patent royalties (referred to as
‘charges’ on income) to deduct tax and account for it
to the Revenue. See
SAIM8000 for more on annual payments.
Formerly, interest and charges were not allowable as deductions in
computing profits from a given source. For tax purposes the amount
of the charge was treated as alienated by the payer and formed part
of the payee’s income. In effect the payer accounted for the
tax liability of the recipient of the payment by deducting tax and
paying it to the Revenue, and the payee received a net payment.
The types of interest and annual payment to which deduction
of tax was applied became narrower over the years. For tax years
before 2006-07, the rules on the deduction of tax were ICTA88/S348
to S350 and applied to
- annual payments made ‘out of’ profits or gains brought into charge to income tax (ICTA88/S348);
- annual payments and ‘annual interest’, ‘not out of’ profits or gains brought into charge to income tax (ICTA88/S349). This applied mainly to companies, which pay corporation tax rather than income tax on their profits.
ICTA88/S348 entitled a person paying an annuity or other annual
payment to deduct tax from the payments. For an income tax payer,
this meant that deduction of tax was optional, although in practice
the payer would pay net. The annual payment was not an allowable
deduction from income, and was therefore made out of taxed income.
Tax was collected as part of the tax charged on the payer’s
income. Other provisions in the Taxes Acts reduced personal reliefs
or the availability of losses in cases where the payer only had
enough taxable income to cover part of the charge.
Under ICTA88/S349 deduction of tax was mandatory. It
required the deduction of tax from annuities, annual payments not
made ‘out of’ profits or gains brought into charge for
income tax and from payments of ‘annual interest’.
These were cases where the payer did not have enough income out of
which the payments were made, or to payments made by companies.
(See the Company Tax Manual CTM9000 for more on charges paid by
companies
SAIM20000.)
ICTA88/S350 allowed the Revenue to raise an assessment on
the payer to recover the tax if they failed to deduct tax at
source, as required under ICTA88/S349 or where annual payments
under ICTA88/S348 exceeded taxed income.
SAIM9050 has more on the old
legislation.
The scope of these sections was further simplified as a
consequence of the Tax Law Rewrite project. From 2007-08 onwards,
relief for annual payments and patent royalties is now given in
Chapter 4 of Part 8 of ITA07, which merges the rules formerly in
ICTA88/S348 and S349 into a single tax treatment replacing the
former legislation on charges on income with an ordinary deduction
from income. The requirement to deduct tax from interest, annual
payments, etc. is now part of the rules in Part 15 of ITA07.
SAIM9060 has more on the new
legislation.
