Last updated: June 27 2024

Avoid Attribution Rules:  Make Tax Efficient Spousal Loans

One interesting and potentially beneficial financial strategy to grow the family’s wealth is to draw up an interspousal loan.  With interest rates set to come down again, and capital gains rates going up, the plan may have more appeal that it has over the high interest rate era we have seen post pandemic. Here’s how the plan – perfectly allowable under the Income Tax Act – works, and some of the benefits:

The CRA frowns on the transfer of income or assets between family members.  Under the “attribution rules”, any money transferred from one spouse, typically the higher-income spouse, to another is deemed to be taxable in the hands of the transferor, at that person’s higher marginal tax rate.  Income splitting opportunities are therefore thwarted.

However, interspousal loans are an important exception to this rule, as long as they are set up correctly.

With such a loan, any investment income earned from the money transferred to the lower-income spouse will be taxed at that person’s lower tax rate. This can lead to significant savings on the couple’s total tax bill. But to legitimize the transaction, here’s what needs to happen:

CHECKPOINT:  DRAWING UP A SPOUSAL INVESTMENT LOAN

  • The loan must be documented properly in writing, for example with a promissory note, including repayment terms, following normal commercial lending rules.
  • The lending spouse must charge the other spouse interest at least equal to Canada Revenue Agency’s prescribed rate (currently 1 percent).
  • The spouse receiving the loan must pay the interest owing to the lender every year within 30 days after year end (by January 30). Failure to meet this condition will result in the normal attribution rules kicking in, meaning that income earned from the loaned money will be taxed in the hands of the higher-income spouse in that year and all future years.
  • The lending spouse is required to report the interest received as income on his or her income tax return.
  • On the other hand, the borrowing spouse can deduct the interest paid on his or her tax return, as long as the loan was used to purchase income-producing assets with the potential of earning passive investment income (interest, dividends, rents or royalties), within in a non-registered account.
  • The spouse receiving the loan is required to pay back only the interest due; there is no requirement to repay the principal.

Bottom Line:  If one spouse has a much higher income than the other, there are numerous benefits to setting up interspousal loans, especially when prescribed interest rates are low.  They are locked in for the life of the loan.  That’s important with the real possibility of more interest rate hikes increasing as time goes on and Canada’s economy starts to recover.

Additional Educational Resources:  Check out the following Professional Certificate Course from Knowledge Bureau:  The Advanced Retirement and Estate Planning Update

With this online course under their belt, both advisors and owner-managers will have better conversations about recent tax changes to make more tax-astute financial decisions.