When a P11D charge applies for a director’s loan account
Summary
| Scenario | P11D Required? | Tax Impact |
| Loan over £10,000 & interest below 2.25% |
Yes |
BIK + Class 1A NIC |
| Loan over £10,000 & interest at or above 2.25% |
No |
No BIK |
| Loan under £10,000 |
No |
No BIK or reporting |
If the director owes more than £10,000 to the company at any point during the tax year, and no or insufficient interest is paid on the loan, then:
The loan is treated as a beneficial loan by HMRC — i.e., a cheap loan from the company to the director.
As a result:
- The company must:
- – Report it on a P11D as a taxable benefit-in-kind (BIK).
- Pay Class 1A National Insurance on the value of the benefit (currently 13.8%).
- The director must:
- Include the benefit on their personal tax return, and pay income tax on it.
Key Conditions:
- The £10,000 limit is the total amount owed at any point in the tax year (even for one day).
- If the director pays the HMRC-approved interest rate (official rate = 2.25% for 2024/25), then no BIK arises and nothing needs to go on a P11D.
- If the loan is under £10,000, no BIK and no P11D is required.
Additional Considerations:
- If the loan isn’t repaid within 9 months after year-end, a Section 455 tax charge (33.75%) may also apply.
- Repeated repaying and re-borrowing (known as “bed and breakfasting”) may be caught by anti-avoidance rules.
When a P11D charge applies for a director’s loan account
