Brendan Burgess
Founder
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A solicitor told me that many of her clients are using their companies to buy their personally owned investment properties for cash purposes. I can't see how this is ever the best solution to the problem. Has anyone come across this proposed solution and how does it work?
I bought a property for my business in 2002 for €1m.
I let it to the company for €40,000 a year.
It was interest only, at SVR, for 10 years but since 2010, it is capital and interest and the repayments are €10,000 a month or €120,000 a year.
The market value of the property today is €1,000,000 (unlikely but I can't make this work otherwise)
My company makes €100,000 profit after paying rent but before my salary.
It has accumulated cash of €300,000.
1) The company buys the property from me for €1,000,000.
2) I pay off the loan to the bank.
3) The company uses its €300,000 cash pile and borrows €700,000 over 15 years.
4) The loan repayments are €5,500 per month
The company is now making profits of €140,000 before interest or €100,000 after interest.
After repayments, the company has €74,000 cash with which to pay me my salary, but I have no loan repayments to make.
The company is retaining profits of €26k on which it pays around €3k corporation tax.
I can't see how this solution is of any benefit
If it's a SVR mortgage, then the bank should be happy enough to reschedule the loan, which would make this complex transaction unnecessary.
If it's a tracker mortgage, the bank won't reschedule it, but if I sell the property to the company, the company will take out a mortgage at Standard Variable Rate.
I have used €1m as the purchase price and €1m as the current value, which is very unlikely. It's more likely that the price has fallen to around €500k. If the company buys the property for its current value, I won't be able to pay off the mortgage. I don't think that the company can pay me more than the market price. It might pay me a generous price e.g. €600,000, but it can't pay €1m.
If the company has a lot of cash, it will have much lower borrowings. But if it has a lot of cash, wouldn't it be a lot simpler to pay that cash out to me to allow me to afford my repayments?
This problem may have arisen because the company has accumulated cash instead of paying it out to the shareholder. Using the company to buy the property from me is just making this problem of having assets in a company much worse.
If the company has a big lump of cash, maybe it should be wound up so that I get the cash subject to CGT. Then I can use the net cash to keep up my repayments for a few years.
I bought a property for my business in 2002 for €1m.
I let it to the company for €40,000 a year.
It was interest only, at SVR, for 10 years but since 2010, it is capital and interest and the repayments are €10,000 a month or €120,000 a year.
The market value of the property today is €1,000,000 (unlikely but I can't make this work otherwise)
My company makes €100,000 profit after paying rent but before my salary.
It has accumulated cash of €300,000.
1) The company buys the property from me for €1,000,000.
2) I pay off the loan to the bank.
3) The company uses its €300,000 cash pile and borrows €700,000 over 15 years.
4) The loan repayments are €5,500 per month
The company is now making profits of €140,000 before interest or €100,000 after interest.
After repayments, the company has €74,000 cash with which to pay me my salary, but I have no loan repayments to make.
The company is retaining profits of €26k on which it pays around €3k corporation tax.
I can't see how this solution is of any benefit
If it's a SVR mortgage, then the bank should be happy enough to reschedule the loan, which would make this complex transaction unnecessary.
If it's a tracker mortgage, the bank won't reschedule it, but if I sell the property to the company, the company will take out a mortgage at Standard Variable Rate.
I have used €1m as the purchase price and €1m as the current value, which is very unlikely. It's more likely that the price has fallen to around €500k. If the company buys the property for its current value, I won't be able to pay off the mortgage. I don't think that the company can pay me more than the market price. It might pay me a generous price e.g. €600,000, but it can't pay €1m.
If the company has a lot of cash, it will have much lower borrowings. But if it has a lot of cash, wouldn't it be a lot simpler to pay that cash out to me to allow me to afford my repayments?
This problem may have arisen because the company has accumulated cash instead of paying it out to the shareholder. Using the company to buy the property from me is just making this problem of having assets in a company much worse.
If the company has a big lump of cash, maybe it should be wound up so that I get the cash subject to CGT. Then I can use the net cash to keep up my repayments for a few years.