What You Need to Know About Family Loans and IRS Rules

What You Need to Know About Family Loans and IRS Rules

Lending money to a family member (or borrowing from a family member) may seem like a good idea: the borrower gets easy approval, and any interest paid is left to the family rather than to the bank.

In many cases, family loans are successful, but success requires a lot of open discussions and planning. You have to deal with administrative problems and the emotional aspect (perhaps more complicated) of things.

To work well, focus on three main areas:

It is also necessary to overcome legal obstacles, such as local laws on robbery and abusive practices in debt collection.

What is a family loan?

A family loan, sometimes called an intra-community loan, is a loan between family members. Family loans are generally less formal than personal loans from traditional or peer-to-peer (P2P) credit institutions, which directly connect potential investors to borrowers.

On the other hand, family loans cannot have simple contracts or contracts in which the debtor or creditor monitors the outstanding interest and payment terms.

Informal family loans can make sense of family dynamics. Still, a loan remains a contract, and loans can have tax consequences for both the borrower and the lender: a creditor who charges interest will have to pay tax on the loan from the debtor.

If the lender does not charge interest, things get complicated. The IRS asks the creditor to pay taxes on "imputed interest rates." The imputed interest rate is the estimated amount of interest that the IRS believes the creditor should have received.

If keeping tracks of interest, payments, and taxes is a puzzle, you can pay an equivalent loan manager to manage documentation and collect payments for you.

Advantages of family loans

Disadvantages of family loans