by Julie Vantomme and Lisa Heynderickx
If a Managing Director or company shareholder allocates money to the business, the company can confer interest on this. In practice this can be done, for example, in the event that the Managing Director or shareholder’s current account has a credit balance.
This so-called credit interest is exclusively deductible for the company in question, to the extent that:
and
If the interest rate or loan amount exceeds the above, the company runs the risk of having a portion of this interest reclassified as a (non-deductible) dividend.
A legal definition of this market-based interest rate was provided on 1 January, 2020. For variable-rate non-mortgage loans (as is the case with a current account credit balance), the market interest rate is based on the MFI interest rate for the November of the previous calendar year, plus 2.5%.
The November 2021 MFI interest rate was 1.57%. This means that, after applying the 2.5% increase, the market interest rate for interest relating to 2022 is 4.07%. In other words: exactly the same rate as last year!
For the sake of completeness, we would like to point out that the maximum statutory market interest rate must also be applied in the event that a company grants a loan to another company.
Please note that this statutory market interest rate applies to variable-rate non-mortgage loans.
If, on the other hand, you use a fixed-term loan, you can consequently apply a market-aligned interest rate for your specific circumstances. In such cases, you may therefore deviate from the (maximum) interest rate of 4.07%.
Do you have additional questions pertaining to interest rates for taxation purposes? Or would you like an analysis of your specific circumstances? Then please do not hesitate to contact one of our experts using the form below.
Julie Vantomme
Certified Tax Advisor julie.vantomme@vdl.be
Lisa Heynderickx
Advisor Tax lisa.heynderickx@vdl.be
Disclaimer
In our opinions, we rely on current legislation, interpretations and legal doctrine. This does not prevent the administration from disputing them or from changing existing interpretations.
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