Div 7a is an anti-avoidance provision only applying to private companies and it is probably one of the most common issues we run into when working with private companies. But the devil is in the detail. How does Div 7A actually work?
Div 7A
Without Div 7A there would be no limit to the tax-free distribution of funds and assets from private companies to shareholders. No private company would pay any dividends. And instead just pay the cash via loans that are never paid back.
Div 7A is to avoid this by deeming certain transactions made by certain entities to certain recipients to be a dividend under certain conditions.
So to see whether Div 7A applies we need to check whether the entity, the recipient and the transaction fall under Div 7A. And whether the distributable surplus limits the Div 7A amount.
Does the entity fall under Div 7A?
The very first thing we need to work out is whether Div 7A even applies to the entity we are looking at. If the entity does not fall under Div 7A, then we can stop right here.
# 1 Is the entity a company? Acually or Deemed or Treated Like?
Div 7A can only apply, if the relevant entity is a company or deemed to be or treated like a company for income tax purposes
Is the entity actually a company?
Under the Corporations Act, a company is any company incorporated as a company under the Corporations Act.
Under income tax law a company is any body corporate and any other unincorporated association or body of persons but does not include a partnership or non-entity joint venture. So income tax law throws a much wider net and goes well beyond just incorporated companies.
As a result, the following entities are companies for income tax purposes but not under the Corporations Act:
- building societies
- mutual societies
- sporting clubs
- most incorporated or unincorporated associations
Is the entity deemed to be a company?
Division 7A originally only applied to companies, hence did not apply to corporate limited partnerships, since by definition these are not companies by definition.
This has now changed. s 109BB ITAA36 extends Div 7A to closely-held corporate limited partnerships who satisfy the conditions in s 109BB.
Although venture capital limited partnerships are specifically exempt per Div 5A ITAA 36.
Is the entity treated like a company?
Division 7A also originally didn’t apply to corporate unit trusts or public trading trusts. Thanks to Div 6b and 6C these are now treated like companies for income tax purposes.
Does it matter whether an entity is deemed to be a company or is treated like a company? Does this different choice of terminology matter?
# 2 Is the company a private company?
Why does it matter whether it is a private or public company? Because Div 7A only applies to private companies.
For income tax purposes, a company is a private company unless it is a public company. Well – nice one – that doesn’t really help us. So what is a public company then?
A company is a public company if its shares (disregard preference shares) are listed on a stock exchange in Australia or elsewhere on the last day of the income year, so usually 30 June.
However, if 20 or less persons hold 75 or more per cent of the company’s capital, voting and dividend rights, then the company is a private company even if listed. This is the so-called 20/75 rule.
So back to our original question: Does the entity fall under Div 7A?
If the entity is a private company, the answer is Yes and you keep going. If the entity is not a private company, the answer is No and you can stop right here.
Does the recipient fall under Div 7A?
Div 7A only applies to transactions between a private company and its shareholders as well as their associates. And it doesn’t matter whether these transactions flow through an interposed entity before reaching a shareholder or associate.
So the crucial question is whether the recipient is a shareholder or their associate.
Under Corporation Law a shareholder is a holder of shares and as such listed on the company’s share registry. So working out whether a recipient is a shareholder should be easy, but sometimes isn’t due to non-share equity.
Div 7A applies to non-share equity interests and equity holders in the same way as it applies to shares and shareholders (s 109 BA ItAA36).
So even if listed on the sh not a shareholder under Corporation Law, a recipient might be one under income tax law due to passing the equity test but failing the debt test. Episode 32
Does the transaction fall under Div 7A?
Div 7A only applies to the following transactions. The company either directly or through an interposed entity like a family trust,
- lend an amount to a shareholder or their associate that was not repaid by lodgement date (s109D and s109E) or significantly alter an existing loan (s109D(5)); or
- pay an amount or provide an asset to a shareholder or their associate (s109C); or
- forgive a debt owed by the shareholder or their associate to the company (s109F)?
Any transaction that meets one of these criteria is a Div 7A transaction.
Exclusion
However, the transaction is excluded from being a deemed dividend if the transaction is a:
- payment of a genuine debt (s 109J); or
- payment of a loan to another company (s 109K); or
- payment or loan that is otherwise assessable (s 109L); or
- loan made in the ordinary course of business (s109M; or
- loan that meet certain criteria for minimum interest and maximum term.
Did the transaction occur after 4 December 1997?
Div 7A only applies to transactions after 4 December 1997, but that is over 20 years ago, so rarely relevant.
Does the Distributable Surplus limit the Div 7A amount?
To see whether s 109Y limits the application of Div 7A, you need to ask:
- What is the company’s distributable surplus; and
- Is this distributable surplus greater than the Div 7A amount?
If Yes, the full amount is a deemed dividend. If No, apply s 109Y.
Section 109Y stipulates that only an amount up to or equal to the distributable surplus is treated as a deemed dividend under Div 7A.
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Last Updated on 12 January 2019