There are a number of ways to secure your shareholder’s loan. The most common is to obtain a General Security Agreement. This is a document given by the company, pledging all assets of the company as security for repayment of your loan. This Agreement must be properly registered.

Is loan to shareholder a current asset?

Balance Sheets and Shareholder Loans Assets may be either short- or long-term and can be fixed or liquid (also called current assets). It’s essential that this loan be paid back, if possible, by the end of the year, or the shareholder may be liable for tax income equal to that amount.

What is needed for shareholder approval?

Which management decisions will require shareholder approval?

  • Appointment of auditors (if there are any)
  • Appointment or re-appointment of directors.
  • Removal of a director or the auditor.
  • Adoption of the annual accounts and the reports of the directors and auditors.
  • Declaration of dividends.

What are the conditions of a shareholder loan?

For example, shareholders and their corporation should ensure that bona fide arrangements are made for the repayment of the loan within a reasonable time. Such arrangements can be made in the form of a written agreement or a corporate resolution setting out the terms and conditions of the loan.

How are shareholder loans evaluated by the IRS?

This article continues our series on loans to shareholders. In the preceding articles, Loans to Shareholders Must Be Made on Market Terms and Loans to Shareholders: The Importance of Payment Terms, we concentrated on particular aspects of loans from a corporation to a shareholder that are examined in determining whether such a loan is bona fide.

Can You charge interest on a shareholder loan?

You can also charge a market related interest on this loan to take advantage of the tax deduction in your business (assuming it’s a payable balance) and the annual interest exemption (R23 800) in your individual capacity.

Where are shareholder loans on a balance sheet?

Typically, the balance sheets of corporate accounts have an account called “shareholder loans” to oversee what is owed and paid to the business. For example, if the shareholder deposited excess personal funds to the business, the shareholder loan account would be in the liability section as the business owes the shareholder.