SAIM9076 - Deduction of tax: yearly interest: practical application
Applying case law principles
It is always a question of fact whether, in any particular case,
interest is yearly or short. The intention of the parties will be
the most important factor in deciding the question (see
SAIM9075).
The question of whether interest is short interest, from
which the payer has no obligation to deduct tax, is most likely to
arise in the context of payments made by a UK resident to a person
whose usual place of abode is outside the UK. If the interest is
short, there is no need for the recipient to apply under a relevant
Double Taxation Agreement to receive the interest gross (or with
tax withheld at a reduced rate). There is guidance at INTM505010
onwards.
A UK resident may make a series of loans, each of less than
a year, to a non-resident, and claim that the interest is short.
HMRC staff should refer to the guidance at INTM542010 in such
cases.
Uncertainty may also arise as to whether there is a duty to
deduct tax from interest in circumstances comparable to that in
Bebb v Bunny (
SAIM9075) – where a sum of money
remains outstanding for a period that may, or may not, be longer
than a year. For example, a manufacturer might guarantee to refund
the purchase price, with interest from the date of claim, if a
product proves faulty: such claims may normally be processed
speedily but, in disputed cases, may drag on for over a year.
Where the parties intend at the outset that monies due will
not be left outstanding longer than 12 months, the interest will be
short – even if, in a few cases, there are delays which
prolong the period over which interest accrues. If however the
parties anticipate at the beginning that the debt will exist for
more than a year, or appear to be indifferent as to whether it will
or not, the interest is likely to be yearly.
Where the payer of the interest is uncertain about whether
it is short or yearly, they may in practice ‘play safe’
by deducting tax. If the recipient of such interest objects to the
tax deduction, HMRC staff should advise him or her to take up the
matter with the payer, see
SAIM9180.
If, conversely, the payer decides that interest is short and
pays it gross, HMRC staff should not challenge that view unless
- the decision appears to be completely unjustified on the facts and in the light of relevant case law, or there is reason to suspect a definite intention of avoiding the payment of withholding tax; and
- material sums of tax are at risk.
