Imputed Interest

Imputed Interest

The IRS uses imputed interest to collect tax revenues on loans or securities that pay little or no interest. The IRS uses an accretive method when calculating the imputed interest on Treasury bonds and has applicable federal rates that set a minimum interest rate in relation to imputed interest and original issue discount rules. The AFR determines the lowest interest that one may charge on loans below a specific interest rate threshold and considers the amount of potential income generated from the interest rate as imputed income. The IRS uses imputed interest to collect tax revenues on loans or securities that pay little or no interest. Because the adjusted purchase price of a zero-coupon bond is initially equal to its purchase price when issued, the accrued interest gained over each accrual period adds to the adjusted purchase price.

Imputed interest is used for tax revenue on loans that pay little interest.

What Is Imputed Interest?

The IRS uses imputed interest to collect tax revenues on loans or securities that pay little or no interest. Imputed interest is important for discount bonds, such as zero-coupon bonds and other securities sold below face value and mature at par. The IRS uses an accretive method when calculating the imputed interest on Treasury bonds and has applicable federal rates that set a minimum interest rate in relation to imputed interest and original issue discount rules.

Imputed interest is used for tax revenue on loans that pay little interest.
Imputed interest is calculated according to the accretive method.
Imputed interest can also apply to loans from family and friends.

Understanding Imputed Interest

Imputed interest may apply to loans among family and friends. For example, a mother loans her son $50,000 with no interest charges. The applicable short-term federal rate is 2 percent, so the son should pay his mother $1,000 annually in interest. The IRS assumes the mother collects this amount from her son and lists it on her tax return as interest income even though she did not collect the funds.

Applicable Federal Rates

Because there were many low-interest or interest-free loans that went untaxed, the IRS established applicable federal rates through the Tax Act of 1984. The AFR determines the lowest interest that one may charge on loans below a specific interest rate threshold and considers the amount of potential income generated from the interest rate as imputed income. Because of the creation of AFR, the IRS may collect tax revenue from loans that otherwise untaxed.

Calculating Imputed Interest on a Zero-Coupon Bond

When calculating imputed interest on a zero-coupon bond, an investor first determines the bond’s yield to maturity. Assuming the accrual period is one year, the investor divides the face value of the bond by the price paid when it, he, or she purchased it. The investor then increases the value by a power equal to one divided by the number of accrual periods before the bond matures. The investor reduces the number by one and multiplies by the number of accrual periods in one year to determine the zero-coupon bond’s YTM.

Because the adjusted purchase price of a zero-coupon bond is initially equal to its purchase price when issued, the accrued interest gained over each accrual period adds to the adjusted purchase price. The accrued interest is the initial adjusted purchase price multiplied by the YTM. This value is the imputed interest for the period.

An Example of Imputed Interest

Imputed interest is important for determining pension payouts. For example, when an employee retires from a company where they were a member of a pension plan, the company may offer the retiree a lump sum of the $500,000 set aside for them under the plan, or they may receive $5,000 a year in benefits. Assuming the applicable short-term federal rate is 2 percent, the retiree needs to determine whether they could find better imputed interest in another market by taking the lump sum and purchasing a higher-yield annuity.

Related terms:

Accretion

Accretion is business growth from internal expansion or through mergers and acquisitions. read more

Accretive

Accretive is the process of accretion, which is the growth or increase by gradual addition, in finance and general nomenclature.  read more

Applicable Federal Rate (AFR)

The applicable federal rate (AFR) is the minimum interest rate that the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) allows for private loans. read more

At Par

At par means that a bond, preferred stock, or other debt instrument is trading at its face value. It will normally trade above par or under par. read more

Bond : Understanding What a Bond Is

A bond is a fixed income investment in which an investor loans money to an entity (corporate or governmental) that borrows the funds for a defined period of time at a fixed interest rate. read more

Constant Yield Method

The constant yield method is one of two accepted ways to calculate the accrued discount of a bond that trades in the secondary market. read more

Deferred Interest Bond

Deferred interest bond is a debt instrument that pays the accruing interest as a lump-sum amount at a later date rather than in periodic increments. read more

Series I Bond

Series I bond is a non-marketable, interest-bearing U.S. government savings bond that earns a combined fixed interest and variable inflation rate (adjusted semiannually). read more

Yield to Maturity (YTM)

Yield to maturity (YTM) is the total return expected on a bond if the bond is held until maturity. read more

Zero-Coupon Bond

A zero-coupon bond is a debt security that doesn't pay interest but trades at a deep discount, rendering profit at maturity when it is redeemed. read more