SE26252 - Beneficial loans: calculating the cash equivalent: interest paid half yearly
Loan agreements often provide for interest to be paid
half-yearly, for example, on 1 June and 1 December each year.
Because of this, it sometimes happens that the first interest
payment does not fall due until after the end of the Income Tax
year in which the loan is obtained. This does not mean that no
interest is payable 'for' that year. Interest is payable for that
year and will be paid in the following year. The appropriate
proportion of it should be taken when it has been paid.
See the example at
SE26253.
The difference between the interest paid
in the year and the interest paid
for the year will not usually be important except
where the loan is taken out or repaid part way through a year. In
most cases you can treat the interest paid in the year as the
amount to be taken into account under
SE26250 (see example at
SE26312). Interest paid
for the year need only be calculated where
- the interest paid in the year is significantly less than the interest paid for the year (as in the example at SE26253) or
- the employee specifically asks for this.
