The General Anti-Abuse Rule (GAAR) Panel has issued its opinion on the use of group loans to avoid the s.455 loan charge, finding that although there was a gap in the legislation, its exploitation was not enough to apply the GAAR and the steps remained a reasonable course of action for the group.

HMRC contended that a tax advantage arose to Z from not having to pay the s455 charge on the balance that initially arose in 2016.

The advisers to Z and M agreed that the loans prevented the s455 charge from arising but:

The GAAR panel noted that their review was restricted to the arrangements undertaken between 2016 and February 2017. They noted that had they been considering the wider arrangements, their conclusions might have been different but that the HMRC notice only referred to this period. The panel found:

The panel concluded that the anti-avoidance legislation at s464A-D CTA 2010 had gap which did not cover group transactions but that this was not a matter that should be covered by the GAAR. Instead it found that the tax arrangements used were a reasonable course of action for the group and the GAAR did not apply.

Useful guides on this topic

General Anti-Abuse Rule:  GAAR (subscriber version)
What is the General Anti-Abuse Rule (GAAR)? When does it apply? 

Directors' loan accounts: Toolkit
HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) have a director's loan accounts toolkit for advisers. This is our enhanced version with planning points. 

Close company loans toolkit (loans to participators)
This guide takes a detailed look at the Corporation Tax treatment when a close company makes a loan to a participator (director-shareholder). It also provides links to our guides for individuals on the making of loans to companies.

Close companies: Definitions & control
This guide goes over basic definitions. When is a company deemed "close" and what constitutes control?

External link:

GAAR advisory panel opinion of 26 April 2022: Repayment of a participator loan through transactions involving group companies


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