Private use of a company’s assets
If you’re a shareholder in or a related party to a company, you should generally pay market rent when you use the company’s residential property, cottage, holiday home, boat or other assets for private purposes.
In this context, ‘related party’ means spouses or individuals to whom the shareholder is related by blood or marriage in an ascending or descending line, or in a lateral branch up to and including uncles and aunts. This is described in the provision on dividends in the Taxation Act (in Norwegian only).
Rent or use of company assets
- If the company acquires an asset as a business investment, you as a shareholder/related party should generally pay market price when renting this asset.
- If the main purpose of the acquisition is private use and this use results in an income reduction or loss for the company due to the commonality of interest, the shareholder/related party must cover all loan expenses, operating expenses and yield on invested capital exceeding paid market price. This is on the presumption that the company’s costs for the private use is higher than the market price.
When the market price does not cover the company’s costs for the private use
The examples show what you as a shareholder/related party must pay in rent when the purchase and use of an asset is mainly for your or a related party’s private use.
If you have not paid rent, a corresponding amount must be reported as a taxable dividend.
If you have paid rent that does not cover the company’s costs, the difference must be reported as a taxable dividend.
The company must recognize the missing rental income as a taxable withdrawal.
Example 1 - Property
The purchase price including improvements is NOK 6,000,000
Relevant costs including value added tax related to the company’s property
NOK
Fixtures and fittings
50,000
Maintenance and repairs
55,000
Miscellaneous other expenses, insurance, electricity, etc.
25,000
Interest expenses
0
Yield on invested capital*
84,000
Calculated rent
214,000
Paid rent or reported dividend
100,000
Underpaid rent or dividend
114,000
*In the example, we’ve assumed that the company has used its unrestricted equity to make the acquisition, and an interest rate of 1.4 percent has been used on the acquisition cost.
The rent a shareholder/related party should pay is NOK 214,000. The taxable dividend is the difference between paid rent (NOK 100,000) and the calculated rent (NOK 214,000), that is NOK 114,000.
Even if the price on the open market indicates a rent of NOK 100,000, the shareholder/related party must pay or report a taxable dividend of another NOK 114,000 when the main purpose of the acquisition is the private interest of the shareholder/related party.
Example 2 - Boat
The acquisition costs is NOK 5,000,000 including value added tax.
Relevant costs including value added tax related to the company’s boat
NOK
Fuel
80,000
Insurance
50,000
Rent of mooring space
60,000
Maintenance and repairs
40,000
Miscellaneous other expenses
75,000
Interest expenses*
75,000
Depreciation**
150,000
Yield on invested capital***
35,000
Calculated rent
565,000
*Loan for the purchase of the boat, NOK 2,500,000 – 3 percent interest.
**Example depreciation – real loss in value or best estimate – for example, 3–5 percent.
***Equity funding of NOK 2,500,000 – 1.4 percent interest.
In the example, it is assumed that you as a shareholder/related party do not pay rent for the use of the boat and that the calculated rent that you must pay or report as a taxable dividend, is a minimum of NOK 565,000
A commonality of interest generally exists when a shareholder owns more than 50 percent of the shares. However, the real influence on the company will be decisive.
This is what the shareholder/related party must do
If you pay rent to the company out of your own private funds (salary, dividend, etc.) you should not report this. Only the company must report the rental income as income in its tax return.
If the use is free, you must log in to the tax return and state the calculated rent as a taxable dividend without the deductible risk-free return, under “Other income”.
This is what the company must do
When the shareholder/related party pays rent, the company must report the rental income as income in its tax return.
When the shareholder/related party does not pay rent, the company must report the calculated rent as “Taxable withdrawals” in its tax return.
Loss of yield on invested capital
Even if the loan and operating expenses are paid with your private funds, the company may still suffer a loss if the acquisition is equity funded.
- As a shareholder/related party, you must pay rent to the company or report the calculated rent as taxable dividend corresponding to the lost yield of the company’s invested capital.
- The company must add the lost yield as a taxable withdrawal.
Incorrect rent price the tax return
If it turns out that you have entered an incorrect rent price, the Tax Administration may change your tax assessment on a discretionary basis, impose additional tax, and:
- for you as a shareholder/related party, add the amount as a taxable dividend
- for the company, add the amount as a taxable withdrawal (reversal of private operating expenses and loan costs and yield on invested capital)
Value added tax
If the company has acquired and deducted input value added tax on expenses related to the private use, the tax is added as a dividend to you as a shareholder/related party.
All deducted input value added tax, both on the acquisition and operating expenses, will be returned to the company in keeping with the amounts on the VAT returns.
Acts and case law
For further explanations and referrals to acts and case law, see the following chapters:
- Tilsidesettelse - internprising og interessefellesskap (Transfer pricing and commonality of interest - in Norwegian only) in the guide Skatte-ABC.
- Uttak av formuesobjekter og/eller tjenester (Withdrawal of assets and/or services - in Norwegian only) in the guide Skatte-ABC.
- Skattlegging av fordelen ved uttak fra selskapet (Taxation of benefits in the form of withdrawals from a company - in Norwegian only) in the guide Skatte-ABC.