Div 7A: Facts Or Fictions?

When it comes to private company loans, Division 7A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 plays a critical role in ensuring shareholders or associates don’t receive tax-free distributions disguised as loans. However, there are common misconceptions about how Division 7A operates—and attempts to sidestep it can easily backfire.

Myth 1: I can temporarily repay my loan before the company’s lodgment day to avoid Division 7A.

Fact: If you repay a loan and then reborrow a similar or larger amount from the same private company, that repayment may be ignored for Division 7A purposes. The law is designed to prevent “round-robin” arrangements where repayments are not genuine. Essentially, you can’t cycle funds in and out of the company just to appear compliant.

Similarly, using the company’s own funds to make a repayment also doesn’t count. If the money used to make the repayment originated from the same company, it defeats the purpose of genuine debt reduction.

Myth 2: I can use company money in my mortgage offset account and repay it later without tax consequences.

Fact: This type of arrangement—where money is borrowed from a private company and placed in a personal mortgage offset account, only to be repaid and reborrowed in a continuous cycle—has clear tax implications under Division 7A. A reasonable person would view this as a premeditated plan to repeatedly borrow and repay funds to generate a tax benefit.

In such cases, the repayments are disregarded, and you are considered not to have repaid the loan by the company’s lodgment day. As a result, the amount can be treated as an unfranked dividend, meaning it’s assessable income without the benefit of franking credits.

Myth 3: If a company’s liabilities exceed its assets, its net assets for Division 7A purposes will be negative.

Fact: Not true. In calculating the distributable surplus for Division 7A, net assets cannot be negative. Instead, if a company’s assets do not exceed its legal obligations and specific provisions, the net asset amount is considered to be zero, not a negative number. This impacts whether a Division 7A deemed dividend can be assessed.

Understanding Division 7A’s rules is essential to avoid unintended tax consequences. Attempting to sidestep the legislation with creative loan strategies is not only ineffective—it can lead to significant penalties.