ÀÏ˾»úÎçÒ¹¸£Àû

Interest received net or gross

Produced by a Tolley Personal Tax expert
Personal Tax
Guidance

Interest received net or gross

Produced by a Tolley Personal Tax expert
Personal Tax
Guidance
imgtext

Interest can best be thought of as compensation for the use (or retention) by one person of a sum of money which belongs to another. Therefore, in order for a payment to be interest, there must be a principal sum on which the interest is calculated and both amounts (the principal and the interest) must be due to the same person.

For further discussion of the meaning of interest, see Simon’s Taxes E1.405.

Unless the interest is specifically exempt (see ‘Exempt interest’ below), it is taxable. This is explored further in the Taxation of savings income guidance note.

The most common forms of interest are the amounts paid by banks or building societies on deposits, although interest may also be paid by companies on amounts loaned by the person.

This guidance note discusses whether the interest is either paid to the recipient gross (no tax deducted, also known as untaxed income) or net (after tax has been deducted, also known as taxed income). The amounts are reported in different boxes on the tax return.

Continue reading the full document
To gain access to additional expert tax guidance, workflow tools, and tax research, register for a free trial of Tolley+â„¢
Powered by
  • 08 Aug 2024 11:40

Popular Articles

Group relief for carried-forward losses

Group relief for carried-forward lossesThis guidance note examines in detail the relief available to groups for carried-forward losses. The scope excludes the treatment of specialist businesses such as banks, insurance companies and oil and gas companies.From 1 April 2017, companies can surrender

14 Jul 2020 11:50 | Produced by Tolley Read more Read more

Classes of NIC and who pays them

Classes of NIC and who pays themClass 1 NICClass 1 NIC is payable on earnings paid to an employed worker which derive from, or are treated as deriving from, an employed earner’s employment in the UK. There are two kinds of Class 1 NIC, primary contributions for which the employee is liable and

14 Jul 2020 11:13 | Produced by Tolley in association with Jim Yuill at The Yuill Consultancy Read more Read more

Research and development (R&D) relief ― overview

Research and development (R&D) relief ― overviewThis guidance note provides an overview of the research and development (R&D) tax reliefs for companies.See the Research and development tax relief summary diagram which summarises the R&D tax relief.See also Simon’s Taxes D1.401.For a factsheet which

14 Jul 2020 12:22 | Produced by Tolley in association with Will Sweeney Read more Read more