UK Directors Loan Tax Calculator- Free S455 and Beneficial Loan Calculator

UK Directors Loan Tax Calculator – Free S455 and Beneficial Loan Calculator | Super-Calculator.com

UK Directors Loan Tax Calculator

Calculate S455 tax, beneficial loan charges, and compare options for clearing your directors loan account. Updated for 2025-26 tax year.

Overdrawn Loan Balance£50,000
Interest Rate Charged0%
Your Income Tax Band
Accounting Year End
Are You a Shareholder?
S455 Tax Due
£16,875
Beneficial Loan Charge
£1,875
Class 1A NIC
£281
BIK Tax (Personal)
£633
Total Annual Cost
£914
Note: S455 tax is refundable when the loan is repaid. The beneficial loan charge applies annually while the loan exceeds £10,000.
Cost Comparison by Option
20k 15k 10k 5k 0
£0
£0
£0
£0
S455 Tax£0
BIK Annual£0
Write-Off Div£0
Write-Off Bonus£0
Recommended Option
Repay Loan
Potential Savings
£0

Section 455 Tax Calculation

ItemDescriptionAmount
30-Day Bed and Breakfasting Rule
If you repay your loan and borrow £5,000 or more within 30 days, the repayment is ignored for S455 purposes. Ensure any repayment is genuine and you do not re-borrow significant amounts within this window.

Beneficial Loan Charge

ItemDescriptionAmount
Avoiding the Beneficial Loan Charge
Charge interest at the official rate of 3.75% on your loan to eliminate the beneficial loan charge. The interest is taxable income for the company but typically costs less than the combined BIK tax and Class 1A NIC.

Options Comparison

OptionImmediate CostOngoing CostTotal Cost
Understanding Your Options
Repay Loan: No tax cost, but requires available funds.
Leave Outstanding: S455 tax plus annual BIK charges while loan exceeds £10,000.
Write-Off as Dividend: Taxed at dividend rates, no NIC. S455 refundable.
Write-Off as Bonus: Taxed as earnings with full NIC. Usually most expensive.

Payment Timeline

Important Deadlines
S455 tax is due nine months and one day after your accounting period end. Repaying the loan before this deadline avoids the charge entirely. After payment, refunds can only be claimed nine months after the period in which repayment occurs.

Understanding Directors Loan Tax: Complete Guide to S455 Tax, Beneficial Loans and Tax-Efficient Strategies

Directors loans represent one of the most complex areas of UK corporate taxation, creating significant planning opportunities alongside substantial compliance risks. When company directors borrow money from their businesses, multiple tax charges can arise including the infamous Section 455 corporation tax charge, benefit in kind taxation, and potential dividend or employment income treatment upon loan write-off. Understanding these interconnected rules is essential for any director seeking to manage their company's cash flow while minimising unnecessary tax exposure.

The directors loan account serves as a running record of transactions between a director and their company, tracking everything from personal expenses paid by the company to funds introduced by the director. When this account shows an overdrawn balance, meaning the director owes money to the company, HMRC applies specific anti-avoidance rules designed to prevent directors from extracting company profits without paying appropriate taxation. These rules have become increasingly sophisticated, with the Section 455 tax rate now standing at 33.75 percent and the beneficial loan official rate rising to 3.75 percent for 2025-26.

Section 455 Tax Calculation
S455 Tax = Overdrawn Loan Balance x 33.75%
The company pays 33.75% S455 tax on any director's loan balance remaining unpaid nine months and one day after the accounting period end. Example: £50,000 overdrawn balance results in £16,875 S455 tax. This tax is refundable when the loan is eventually repaid, but the company must wait nine months after repayment to reclaim it.

What Is a Directors Loan Account

A directors loan account records all financial transactions between a director and their limited company that fall outside normal salary, dividend, or expense reimbursement payments. When a director withdraws money from the company bank account for personal use, pays personal expenses using company funds, or uses the company credit card for non-business purchases, these amounts are recorded as loans from the company to the director. Conversely, when a director introduces personal funds into the company or pays business expenses from personal funds, these create credits on the loan account representing money the company owes to the director.

The loan account balance fluctuates throughout the year as transactions occur. A credit balance indicates the company owes money to the director, which can be repaid tax-free at any time. An overdrawn or debit balance indicates the director owes money to the company, triggering potential tax implications. The year-end balance is particularly important as this determines whether Section 455 tax applies. Directors should monitor their loan accounts regularly throughout the year rather than discovering problems at year-end when options for resolution are limited.

Close companies, defined as companies controlled by five or fewer participators or by any number of directors who are also participators, are subject to these directors loan rules. In practice, most owner-managed limited companies fall within this definition. Participators include shareholders, loan creditors, and anyone with the right to participate in company distributions, meaning the rules typically capture all small business owners who operate through limited companies.

Key Point: The Nine Month Deadline

The critical deadline for avoiding S455 tax is nine months and one day after your accounting period end. If your company year ends on 31 March 2026, you must repay any overdrawn loan balance by 1 January 2027 to avoid the 33.75% charge. Missing this deadline even by one day triggers the full S455 liability.

Section 455 Tax Explained

Section 455 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010 requires close companies to pay a temporary corporation tax charge when loans to participators remain outstanding beyond the normal corporation tax payment deadline. The current S455 tax rate is 33.75 percent, deliberately set to match the higher rate of dividend tax, ensuring that money extracted via loans faces equivalent taxation to money taken as dividends. This design prevents directors from using loans as a tax-free method of accessing company funds indefinitely.

The S455 charge is due nine months and one day after the company's accounting period end, the same deadline as normal corporation tax. For a company with a 31 December 2025 year-end, any S455 tax on outstanding loans would be due by 1 October 2026. The charge is calculated on the loan balance outstanding at this deadline, not the year-end balance. If a director partially repays their loan before the deadline, S455 applies only to the remaining unpaid balance.

Importantly, S455 tax is refundable when the loan is subsequently repaid. However, the refund process creates a cashflow disadvantage. The company cannot claim its S455 refund until nine months and one day after the end of the accounting period in which the loan was repaid. This means the company could be out of pocket for the S455 amount for eighteen months or more. For a £50,000 loan, the company would effectively lose access to £16,875 for this extended period, representing a significant working capital impact.

S455 Tax Timeline Example
Year-End 31 Dec 2025 → S455 Due 1 Oct 2026 → Loan Repaid 30 Jun 2027 → Refund Available 1 Oct 2028
If a director borrows £40,000 and does not repay within the deadline, the company pays £13,500 S455 tax in October 2026. If the loan is repaid in June 2027, the company cannot reclaim the £13,500 until October 2028, creating an 18+ month cash lockup.

Beneficial Loan Charge and P11D Reporting

Separate from S455 tax, directors who borrow more than £10,000 from their company face a benefit in kind charge if the loan is interest-free or charged at below the HMRC official rate. For the 2025-26 tax year, the official rate increased significantly to 3.75 percent using the precise calculation method, up from the previous 2.25 percent. This represents the highest official rate since 2014 and substantially increases the tax cost of beneficial loans.

The taxable benefit is calculated as the difference between the interest that would have been charged at the official rate and any interest actually charged on the loan. This benefit must be reported on the director's P11D form and is subject to income tax through their PAYE code or self-assessment return. Additionally, the company must pay Class 1A National Insurance contributions at 15 percent for 2025-26 on the value of the benefit provided.

Directors can avoid the beneficial loan charge by paying interest on their loan at or above the official rate. The interest received becomes taxable income for the company, but the overall cost is typically lower than the combined income tax and NIC arising from the benefit in kind. Alternatively, keeping the loan balance below £10,000 at all times during the tax year avoids the beneficial loan charge entirely, as the de minimis exemption applies to loans that never exceed this threshold.

Beneficial Loan Charge Calculation
Taxable Benefit = Loan Amount x (Official Rate - Interest Charged)
For a £25,000 interest-free loan throughout 2025-26: Benefit = £25,000 x 3.75% = £937.50. A higher rate taxpayer pays £316.41 income tax (33.75%), plus the company pays £140.63 Class 1A NIC (15%), totalling £457.04 annual cost.

The Bed and Breakfasting Anti-Avoidance Rules

HMRC's bed and breakfasting rules prevent directors from artificially avoiding S455 tax by repaying loans shortly before the deadline only to re-borrow shortly afterwards. The 30-day rule applies where a director repays a loan of £5,000 or more and borrows at least £5,000 within 30 days. In such cases, the repayment is treated as ineffective for S455 purposes, and the company remains liable for the tax charge.

The arrangements rule provides even broader anti-avoidance protection. If at the time of repayment, arrangements exist for the director to receive a further loan or payment from the company, the repayment is matched against this anticipated loan and S455 relief is denied. This rule catches schemes where directors plan to re-borrow after the 30-day window has passed, as HMRC can look at the overall arrangement rather than just the timing of individual transactions.

From October 2024, a targeted anti-avoidance rule strengthens these provisions further. Where arrangements are found to be avoidance schemes designed specifically to circumvent the S455 rules, the tax charge may apply regardless of whether the loan appears to have been genuinely repaid. Directors should ensure any loan repayments are genuine and commercially motivated rather than artificial transactions designed purely for tax purposes.

Key Point: The 30-Day Rule

If you repay your directors loan and then borrow £5,000 or more within 30 days, HMRC treats the repayment as void for S455 purposes. To safely avoid S455 tax, ensure you do not re-borrow any significant amount within the 30-day window following repayment.

Options for Clearing an Overdrawn Directors Loan

Directors have several options for clearing overdrawn loan accounts, each with different tax implications. The most straightforward approach is simple repayment with personal funds, which clears the loan without triggering any additional tax beyond avoiding the S455 charge. This option requires the director to have sufficient personal resources and may not always be practical.

Voting dividends to clear the loan is often tax-efficient where the company has sufficient distributable reserves. The dividend is taxed at 8.75 percent for basic rate taxpayers, 33.75 percent for higher rate taxpayers, or 39.35 percent for additional rate taxpayers in 2025-26. No National Insurance contributions apply to dividends, making this potentially cheaper than taking additional salary. The dividend allowance of £500 can offset some liability, though this provides minimal benefit given its low level.

Taking a bonus or additional salary can clear the loan but is typically more expensive due to combined income tax and National Insurance. Salary up to £50,270 faces 20 percent income tax plus 8 percent employee NIC, with the company paying 15 percent employer NIC on amounts above £5,000. Higher earnings face 40 percent income tax plus 2 percent employee NIC, plus the ongoing employer NIC. The effective marginal rate can exceed 50 percent when employer NIC is factored in.

Writing Off a Directors Loan

When a company formally writes off a directors loan, specific tax treatment applies depending on the circumstances. For director shareholders, a written-off loan is typically treated as a distribution and taxed as dividend income. This means the director pays dividend tax rates of 8.75 percent, 33.75 percent, or 39.35 percent depending on their tax band, but no National Insurance contributions apply. The company can reclaim any S455 tax previously paid once the loan is written off.

Where the director is an employee but not a shareholder, a written-off loan may be treated as earnings subject to income tax and both employee and employer National Insurance contributions. This treatment is generally more expensive than the dividend treatment available to shareholder directors. In practice, most directors of small companies are also shareholders, making the dividend treatment more commonly applicable.

Writing off a loan creates a corporation tax deduction for the company in most cases, providing some offset against the cost. However, this deduction is only available where the write-off represents an allowable business expense, which requires the loan to have been made for business purposes originally. Loans made purely for the director's personal benefit may not qualify for corporation tax relief when written off.

Write-Off as Dividend Comparison
Dividend Tax on £50,000 Write-Off (Higher Rate) = £50,000 x 33.75% = £16,875
Compared to taking the same amount as salary bonus: Income tax 40% = £20,000, plus employee NIC 2% = £1,000, plus employer NIC 15% = £7,500. Total salary cost: £28,500 versus dividend cost of £16,875. Writing off as dividend saves £11,625.

S455 Tax Versus Leaving the Loan Outstanding

Some directors question whether paying S455 tax and leaving the loan outstanding might be preferable to repaying it, particularly if they lack immediate funds for repayment. The analysis depends on the director's intentions and the company's cash position. S455 tax at 33.75 percent represents a significant cost, but it is refundable when the loan is eventually repaid, making it effectively an interest-free loan from HMRC to the company.

However, the cash flow impact is substantial. The company must pay out the S455 amount and cannot recover it for nine months after repayment. During this period, the company loses access to these funds, which could otherwise be used for business purposes. Additionally, if the loan remains outstanding at the next year-end, no further S455 charge applies on the same balance, but beneficial loan charges continue to accrue annually for loans exceeding £10,000.

Where a director genuinely cannot repay and writing off is not appropriate, leaving the loan outstanding and paying S455 may be the least worst option. The company preserves its relationship with HMRC by paying the required tax, the loan remains valid and repayable, and the S455 will eventually be refunded. This approach should be a conscious business decision rather than a default position arising from poor planning.

Corporation Tax Implications

Directors loans interact with corporation tax in several ways beyond the S455 charge. Interest charged on loans to directors represents taxable income for the company, potentially increasing its corporation tax liability at the current 25 percent rate for profits above £250,000 or the small profits rate of 19 percent for profits below £50,000. The marginal relief calculation applies for profits between these thresholds.

Where a loan is written off and the company claims a deduction, this reduces taxable profits and generates corporation tax savings. For a company paying tax at 25 percent, writing off a £50,000 loan creates a £12,500 tax saving, partially offsetting the dividend tax paid by the director on the write-off. This interaction can make loan write-offs more attractive than they initially appear.

The S455 tax itself is not deductible for corporation tax purposes, as it represents a temporary charge rather than an expense. Similarly, the refund of S455 when received is not treated as taxable income. The S455 system operates entirely separately from the main corporation tax computation, with the charge simply added to or deducted from the company's tax position as appropriate.

Key Point: Corporation Tax Rate Changes

From April 2023, companies with profits over £250,000 pay corporation tax at 25 percent, while those with profits under £50,000 pay 19 percent. Associated companies share these thresholds, so a group with five associated companies would see the 25 percent rate apply from just £50,000 profit per company.

Planning Strategies for Directors Loans

Effective planning requires monitoring directors loan accounts throughout the year rather than waiting until year-end. Directors should set up regular reviews, perhaps quarterly, to assess their loan position and plan any necessary repayments. This forward planning allows time to arrange funding or structure dividend payments without the pressure of approaching deadlines.

Keeping loan balances below £10,000 avoids beneficial loan charges entirely. Where larger loans are necessary, charging interest at the official rate eliminates the benefit in kind while creating minimal additional tax cost. The interest received is taxable for the company, but at corporation tax rates potentially lower than the combined income tax and NIC on a benefit in kind.

Timing dividend declarations to coincide with loan account management can be efficient. Directors can vote dividends shortly before year-end, clearing overdrawn positions before they crystallise. The dividends are then taxable in the tax year of receipt, and payment can be made by crediting the directors loan account rather than physical cash transfer. This achieves the same economic result as repaying the loan while managing the tax position effectively.

Record Keeping and Compliance Requirements

Companies must maintain accurate records of all transactions affecting directors loan accounts, including the date, amount, and nature of each transaction. Bank statements, expense claims, dividend vouchers, and board minutes documenting loan decisions should all be retained. HMRC can request these records during enquiries, and inadequate documentation may lead to unfavourable assumptions about the tax treatment of transactions.

Directors loans must be reported on the company's corporation tax return, specifically in the supplementary pages CT600A where loans to participators exist. All loans must be reported regardless of whether S455 tax actually arises, allowing HMRC to monitor potential exposure. The beneficial loan benefit must also be reported on P11D forms and the company must complete form P11D(b) declaring its Class 1A NIC liability.

Where S455 tax is reclaimed after loan repayment, the company must include details in its corporation tax return for the period in which repayment occurred. Alternatively, form L2P can be used to claim relief outside the return process, which may be appropriate where the normal return deadline has passed. Claims must be made within four years of the end of the accounting period in which repayment occurred.

Company Liquidation and Directors Loans

Outstanding directors loans take on particular significance when a company enters liquidation. The liquidator has a duty to recover all debts owed to the company, including amounts due from directors via loan accounts. Directors may find themselves pursued for repayment even where the company is insolvent and they expected the loan to be written off.

Where the liquidator formally releases or writes off a directors loan as irrecoverable, the director faces taxation on the released amount. For shareholder directors, this typically means dividend tax treatment. For employee directors without shares, earnings treatment with full NIC may apply. In either case, the director faces a tax bill on amounts they may have already spent and cannot easily repay.

S455 tax paid before liquidation is not automatically refunded. If the loan is released or written off during liquidation, the company may be able to reclaim the S455, but this depends on the timing and the liquidator's actions. Directors should seek specialist advice before liquidation where significant loan balances exist, as the interaction of insolvency law and tax law in this area is particularly complex.

Key Point: Liquidation Planning

If you are considering closing your company while a directors loan is outstanding, plan carefully. Repaying the loan before liquidation avoids both the S455 charge and potential personal tax on write-off. Seek professional advice as the consequences of getting this wrong can be significant.

Multiple Directors and Loan Accounts

Where a company has multiple directors with loan accounts, each account is tracked separately but the S455 rules apply collectively. If one director has a credit balance representing money owed by the company and another has an overdrawn balance representing money owed to the company, these cannot be netted off for S455 purposes. The company must pay S455 on any overdrawn balances even if credit balances exist on other accounts.

Transfers between directors' accounts, where permitted by the company's constitution and properly documented, may help manage positions. A director with a credit balance could transfer part of their balance to another director with a debit balance, though this creates a personal arrangement between the directors rather than affecting the company's position. Such arrangements should be formally documented to avoid disputes.

Family companies often have complex loan account positions involving spouses, children, and other family members who may be participators. The S455 rules apply to loans to all participators and their associates, not just directors, so loans to family members can trigger charges even where those family members have no formal role in the company. Careful structuring and monitoring is essential in family business situations.

Current Tax Rates Summary for 2025-26

For the 2025-26 tax year, the key rates affecting directors loans are: S455 corporation tax charge at 33.75 percent on overdrawn balances, the HMRC official rate for beneficial loans at 3.75 percent using the precise method, and Class 1A National Insurance on benefits in kind at 15 percent. Dividend tax rates are 8.75 percent for basic rate taxpayers, 33.75 percent for higher rate taxpayers, and 39.35 percent for additional rate taxpayers. The dividend allowance remains at £500.

From April 2026, dividend tax rates will increase by 2 percentage points, with the ordinary rate rising to 10.75 percent and the upper rate to 35.75 percent. The additional rate remains unchanged at 39.35 percent. This increase makes dividend-based strategies for clearing directors loans slightly more expensive from next year, potentially favouring action before April 2026 where possible.

The beneficial loan official rate is now reviewed quarterly rather than annually, meaning it could change during the tax year. Directors with ongoing loans should monitor rate announcements on 6 April, 6 July, 6 October, and 6 January, as changes affect the calculation of their beneficial loan charges. This represents a significant change from previous years when the rate was fixed annually.

2025-26 Key Tax Rates Summary
S455: 33.75% | Official Rate: 3.75% | Class 1A NIC: 15% | Dividend Higher Rate: 33.75%
These rates apply for the tax year 6 April 2025 to 5 April 2026. S455 tax is due nine months and one day after accounting period end. Beneficial loan charges apply where loans exceed £10,000 at any point during the tax year. Class 1A NIC is payable by 22 July following the tax year end.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is S455 tax and when does it apply?
S455 tax is a corporation tax charge of 33.75 percent that applies when a close company makes a loan to a participator such as a director or shareholder and that loan remains outstanding nine months and one day after the company's accounting period end. The charge is designed to prevent directors from extracting company funds tax-free through loans. The tax is temporary and refundable when the loan is eventually repaid, written off, or released, though the refund cannot be claimed until nine months after the repayment occurs.
What is the current S455 tax rate for 2025-26?
The S455 tax rate is 33.75 percent for the 2025-26 tax year and applies to all loans made from April 2022 onwards. This rate matches the higher rate of dividend tax, ensuring equivalent treatment between loans and dividends. For loans made before April 2022 that remain outstanding, the older rate of 32.5 percent may apply. The rate is reviewed annually and may change in future budgets.
How do I avoid paying S455 tax?
The simplest way to avoid S455 tax is to repay any overdrawn directors loan balance before the deadline of nine months and one day after your accounting period end. For example, if your year-end is 31 March 2026, repay by 1 January 2027. You can also clear the loan by voting dividends and crediting them to your loan account, taking additional salary, or having the company write off the loan, though these alternatives trigger other tax charges such as dividend tax or income tax plus NIC.
Can I reclaim S455 tax after paying it?
Yes, S455 tax is fully refundable when the directors loan is repaid, written off, or released. However, you cannot claim the refund immediately upon repayment. HMRC only processes refund claims nine months and one day after the end of the accounting period in which repayment occurred. This means you could be waiting eighteen months or more to recover the S455 amount, creating a significant cash flow impact for the company.
What is the bed and breakfasting rule for directors loans?
The bed and breakfasting rule is an anti-avoidance provision that prevents directors from temporarily repaying loans to avoid S455 tax and then immediately re-borrowing. Under the 30-day rule, if you repay a loan of £5,000 or more and borrow at least £5,000 within the following 30 days, the repayment is treated as void for S455 purposes. The arrangements rule extends this further, catching planned re-borrowing even beyond the 30-day window.
What is the HMRC official rate for beneficial loans in 2025-26?
The HMRC official rate for beneficial loans increased to 3.75 percent from 6 April 2025 when using the precise calculation method, up from 2.25 percent previously. This is the highest rate since 2014. The rate is now reviewed quarterly and may change during the tax year on 6 April, 6 July, 6 October, or 6 January. Directors with interest-free loans above £10,000 will face significantly higher benefit in kind charges as a result of this increase.
When does the beneficial loan charge apply?
The beneficial loan charge applies when a director or employee borrows more than £10,000 from their company at any point during the tax year and the loan is either interest-free or charged at below the HMRC official rate. The £10,000 threshold must not be exceeded at any time during the year, not just at year-end. If the loan stays below £10,000 throughout the entire tax year, no beneficial loan charge arises regardless of the interest rate charged.
How is the beneficial loan charge calculated?
The beneficial loan charge equals the difference between the interest that would have been charged at the official rate and any interest actually charged. For a £30,000 interest-free loan held throughout 2025-26, the benefit would be £30,000 multiplied by 3.75 percent, equalling £1,125. This amount is taxable as employment income at the director's marginal rate, and the company must pay 15 percent Class 1A NIC on top, adding £168.75 to the cost.
Can I charge interest on my directors loan to avoid the beneficial loan charge?
Yes, charging interest at or above the HMRC official rate eliminates the beneficial loan charge entirely. For 2025-26, this means charging at least 3.75 percent per annum. The interest received becomes taxable income for the company and is subject to corporation tax, but this is typically cheaper than the combined income tax and NIC cost of a benefit in kind. Interest must actually be paid during the tax year, not just charged on paper.
What is the Class 1A NIC rate on benefits in kind for 2025-26?
The Class 1A National Insurance contributions rate for 2025-26 is 15 percent, increased from 13.8 percent in the previous year. This applies to the taxable value of all benefits in kind, including beneficial loans. The company is responsible for paying Class 1A NIC, which is due by 22 July following the end of the tax year. This increase makes employer-provided benefits more expensive than in previous years.
What happens if I write off my directors loan?
When a company writes off a directors loan to a shareholder director, the written-off amount is treated as a distribution and taxed at dividend rates. For 2025-26, this means 8.75 percent for basic rate taxpayers, 33.75 percent for higher rate taxpayers, or 39.35 percent for additional rate taxpayers. No National Insurance contributions apply. The company can reclaim any S455 tax previously paid and may be able to claim a corporation tax deduction for the write-off.
Is it better to write off my directors loan or take a dividend?
Writing off a loan and taking a dividend have similar tax treatment for shareholder directors, as both are taxed at dividend rates. However, writing off an existing loan clears your loan account immediately without needing to move cash, whereas a dividend requires the company to have distributable reserves and involves declaring a new distribution. If you already have an overdrawn loan account, writing it off is often more straightforward than declaring dividends to credit against it.
What are the dividend tax rates for 2025-26?
For the 2025-26 tax year, dividend tax rates are 8.75 percent within the basic rate band, 33.75 percent within the higher rate band, and 39.35 percent for additional rate taxpayers. The dividend allowance remains at £500, meaning the first £500 of dividend income above your personal allowance is taxed at zero percent. From April 2026, the basic and higher rates increase by 2 percentage points to 10.75 percent and 35.75 percent respectively.
How does S455 tax interact with corporation tax?
S455 tax is paid alongside corporation tax but is calculated separately. It is not deductible against profits and does not affect your corporation tax computation. The S455 charge is simply added to your corporation tax liability for payment purposes. When S455 is refunded, this is not treated as taxable income. The two calculations are entirely separate, though both are reported on your CT600 return and paid to the same deadlines.
What is a close company for directors loan purposes?
A close company is broadly defined as a company controlled by five or fewer participators, or by any number of directors who are also participators. Participators include shareholders, loan creditors, and anyone entitled to participate in distributions. In practice, most small owner-managed limited companies are close companies. The S455 rules only apply to close companies, but since most small businesses fall within this definition, the rules affect the majority of director shareholders.
Do directors loans affect my credit score?
Directors loans are transactions between you and your company, not external borrowing, so they do not appear on personal credit files or affect your personal credit score directly. However, if your company's financial health is affected by significant loans outstanding, this could indirectly impact business credit ratings. Personal guarantees given for company borrowing and missed payments on personal debts used to fund loan repayments would affect your personal credit score.
Can family members have directors loan accounts?
S455 rules apply to loans to all participators and their associates, which includes family members of directors and shareholders. If your company lends money to your spouse, children, or other close relatives who are participators or associates of participators, the same S455 rules apply. Family members do not need to be directors or even employees for the rules to bite. Careful structuring is essential where family companies make loans to multiple family members.
What happens to my directors loan if the company is liquidated?
Outstanding directors loans must be repaid to the liquidator during company liquidation. The liquidator has a duty to collect all debts owed to the company, including amounts due from directors. If you cannot repay and the loan is written off, you face personal tax on the released amount at dividend rates for shareholders or earnings rates for non-shareholder employees. Any S455 tax previously paid may be reclaimable, but timing depends on the liquidation process.
How do I report directors loans on my company tax return?
Directors loans are reported on the CT600A supplementary pages to your corporation tax return. All loans to participators must be reported, even where no S455 tax is due because the loan was repaid within the nine-month deadline. You must show the amounts outstanding at year-end, any repayments made, and calculate any S455 charge due. The beneficial loan benefit is reported separately on P11D forms for the relevant directors or employees.
Can I use my directors loan account to pay myself instead of salary?
While directors often draw money through their loan account for convenience, this is not a permanent alternative to salary or dividends. Amounts drawn create a debt that must eventually be cleared through repayment, dividend credit, or write-off, all of which have tax consequences. Using the loan account for regular drawings without a repayment plan leads to growing balances and eventual S455 charges. It works as a short-term cash flow tool but not as a substitute for proper remuneration.
What records should I keep for my directors loan account?
Maintain detailed records of all transactions affecting your loan account, including dates, amounts, and descriptions. Keep bank statements showing transfers, receipts for personal expenses paid by the company, dividend vouchers, board minutes authorising loans or write-offs, and any loan agreements. HMRC can request these records during an enquiry, and poor documentation may lead them to take an unfavourable view of ambiguous transactions.
Is there a limit to how much I can borrow through a directors loan?
There is no legal maximum for directors loans, but practical limits exist. Your company must have sufficient cash available, and your articles of association may impose restrictions on loans to directors. The company's board must approve the loan, and shareholder approval may be required for larger amounts depending on your articles. From a tax perspective, larger loans mean larger S455 charges and beneficial loan costs, creating natural disincentives to excessive borrowing.
Can I offset my directors loan against money the company owes me?
Yes, if your company owes you money, whether from unpaid salary, expenses, dividends, or funds you introduced, you can offset this against an overdrawn loan balance through a book entry. Ensure both sides of the transaction are properly documented with appropriate authorisation. The offset reduces your loan balance, potentially avoiding S455 charges. However, be careful not to create artificial transactions purely for tax purposes as this could fall foul of anti-avoidance rules.
How often should I review my directors loan account?
Review your directors loan account at least quarterly to track your position and plan any necessary actions. Monthly reviews are better for businesses with frequent transactions through the loan account. Key review points are before year-end, when you can still clear balances before they crystallise, and before the S455 deadline nine months later. Regular monitoring prevents nasty surprises and allows time to arrange funding for any necessary repayments.
What is the deadline for paying S455 tax?
S455 tax is due nine months and one day after your company's accounting period end, the same deadline as corporation tax. For a company with a 31 December year-end, S455 tax would be due by 1 October the following year. Late payment attracts interest at HMRC's late payment rate, and penalties may apply for significant underpayment. The deadline applies to the balance outstanding at that date, not the year-end balance.
Can I claim back S455 tax if I partially repay my loan?
Yes, partial repayments trigger partial refunds. If you paid S455 tax on a £50,000 loan and later repay £20,000, you can claim back 40 percent of the original S455 charge proportionate to the repayment. The claim must wait until nine months and one day after the end of the accounting period in which the partial repayment occurred. You do not need to clear the entire loan before claiming refunds on amounts repaid.
What forms do I need to reclaim S455 tax?
To reclaim S455 tax for loans repaid within two years of the accounting period end, include the claim in your CT600A supplementary pages on your corporation tax return. For claims outside this window, use form L2P, available from HMRC. The earliest any claim can be made is nine months and one day after the accounting period in which repayment occurred. Claims must be made within four years of the relevant accounting period end.
Does S455 tax apply to loans to employees who are not directors?
S455 tax applies to loans to participators, which includes shareholders and those entitled to participate in distributions. An employee who holds no shares and has no participation rights is not caught by S455 rules. However, interest-free or low-interest loans to any employee, including non-participator employees, can still trigger beneficial loan charges where amounts exceed £10,000. The two sets of rules operate independently based on different criteria.
What is the small loan exemption for S455?
There is no specific small loan exemption for S455 tax. Any loan to a participator outstanding at the S455 deadline triggers the charge regardless of size. However, there is a separate exemption where the participator does not have a material interest in the company, is a full-time employee or director, and the loan balance is £15,000 or less. This exemption has strict conditions and does not apply to most director shareholders of small companies who typically have material interests.
How do directors loans affect dividend planning?
Directors loans and dividends interact closely for planning purposes. Dividends can be voted and credited to your loan account rather than paid in cash, reducing your overdrawn balance and avoiding S455 charges. When planning dividend levels, consider whether amounts should be used to clear loans or paid as cash. The dividend allowance applies regardless of how dividends are used, so the first £500 credited to your loan account remains tax-free just as cash dividends would be.
Can my company charge me more than the official rate on a directors loan?
Yes, your company can charge any interest rate on a directors loan, including rates above the HMRC official rate. Charging higher rates eliminates any beneficial loan charge and generates additional income for the company, though this income is subject to corporation tax. There is no upper limit, but the rate should be commercially reasonable. Extremely high rates might attract HMRC scrutiny as potential tax avoidance if they appear designed to extract profits artificially.
What happens if my directors loan account goes from overdrawn to credit during the year?
S455 tax is calculated on the balance outstanding at the payment deadline nine months after year-end, not the year-end balance. If your account is overdrawn at year-end but you repay before the S455 deadline, no S455 charge arises. However, beneficial loan charges are calculated based on the loan balance throughout the year. If your loan exceeded £10,000 at any point during the tax year, even if it was repaid before year-end, the beneficial loan charge applies for the period the loan was outstanding.

Conclusion

Directors loans provide flexible access to company funds but require careful management to avoid unnecessary tax charges. The S455 regime at 33.75 percent represents a significant cost if loans remain outstanding past the nine-month deadline, while beneficial loan charges at the increased 3.75 percent official rate add to the expense of larger interest-free borrowing. Understanding these rules and planning proactively can save substantial amounts compared to dealing with problems reactively.

The key principles for effective directors loan management are: monitor your loan account regularly throughout the year, repay or clear balances before the S455 deadline wherever possible, charge interest at the official rate on loans exceeding £10,000, and maintain thorough documentation of all transactions. Where loans cannot be repaid, understand the tax implications of the alternatives including dividend credit, salary payment, or formal write-off.

With dividend tax rates increasing from April 2026 and the beneficial loan official rate now subject to quarterly review, the landscape for directors loans continues to evolve. Directors should review their positions regularly with professional advisers to ensure their arrangements remain tax-efficient and compliant. The consequences of poor planning can be significant, but with proper attention, directors loans remain a useful tool for managing personal and company cash flows.

Scroll to Top