Company loan v company credit card
As a director shareholder, borrowing cash from your company can trigger tax charges for both you and it. To avoid these a colleague has suggested that it’s more tax efficient to obtain a company credit card and use that instead. Is she correct?

Company loan
Borrowing cash from your company can be a tax-free way to take cash. Tax charges only apply if:
- the total you borrow exceeds £10,000 at any point in a tax year and you aren’t required to pay interest on the debt at HMRC’s official rate (2.25% for 2024/25) or higher; or
- the debt isn’t fully repaid within nine months following the end of the company’s accounting period in which you borrowed the money.
In the first instance the loan counts as a taxable benefit in kind on which you’ll pay tax and your company will pay Class 1A NI. In the second instance your company will be liable to a corporation tax charge, although this is refundable nine months after the end of the accounting period in which the debt is repaid.
Avoidable tax
As long as you keep your borrowing within the £10,000 threshold and repay it within the nine-month deadline you’ll avoid any tax charges.
Example 1. Mark is the majority shareholder and a director of Acom Ltd. The company prepares its annual accounts to 30 September. In April 2024 he undertakes some home improvements and borrows money (£8,000) interest free from Acom, to fund these. He has no other borrowing from Acom. Mark makes loan repayments periodically so that by the end of June 2025, i.e. within the nine-month deadline, the debt has been cleared and no personal or company tax charges arise.
Example 2. The circumstances are the same as those in our first example except that Mark borrows another £6,000 in June 2024. This takes his loan over the £10,000 threshold which causes the entire borrowing of £14,000, not just the excess over £10,000, to be a taxable loan for benefit in kind purposes. Mark can still prevent Acom having to face a tax charge if he repays the £14,000 by the deadline.
Alternative borrowing
If Acom provides Mark with a company credit card not only would this make his life easier when he has to buy goods or services for the business but he can also use the card to make private purchases. What’s more, he can use the card to prevent the tax charge which occurred in our second example.
Example 3. The circumstances are the same as in our second example except that instead of borrowing the £6,000 in June 2024 Mark pays for the home improvements with his company credit card. This doesn’t count as borrowing (unless Acom makes it a condition of providing the card that the cost of private purchases must be reimbursed) meaning that the £10,000 threshold isn’t exceeded. The £8,000 he borrowed in April is tax free.
The £6,000 private card purchase will count as a taxable benefit in kind unless Mark makes good the cost to Acom, i.e. reimburses it, by 6 July 2025. As it was Mark’s plan to repay the whole debt to Acom by the end of June 2025 this shouldn’t pose any difficulty.
Related Topics
-
Capital gains tax break for job-related accommodation
You’re in the process of selling a property that you bought as your home but because of your job have never lived in. You’ve been told that you’ll have to pay tax on any gain you make, but might a special relief get you off the hook?
-
Should you revoke your 20-year-old option?
Your business has let out a building to a tenant and it is now just over 20 years since you opted to tax the property with HMRC. Should you revoke it so that your tenant no longer needs to pay VAT?
-
Chip shop owner fined £40k for hiring illegal worker
A Surrey fish and chip shop owner has been left in shock after being fined £40,000 for allegedly employing someone who didn’t have the right to work in the UK, even though he conducted a right to work check. Where did this employer go wrong and what can you learn from it?