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January 31, 2024
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Repayment of a personal loan considered "earned Income"

  • January 31, 2024
  • 4 replies
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We bought our son's house when he got divorced, so he would not lose it.  We paid cash for it.  He pays us on a monthly basis for this personal loan.  The loan is at zero percent interest.  Is the repayment considered earned income to us for tax reporting purposes?

Best answer by JohnB5677

No, the principal that he pays back is not taxable; however, as far as the IRS is concerned, there is no such thing as an interest-free loan

  1. Loans without interest, or at below-market interest rates, are recharacterized so that the lender must recognize market-rate interest income.
  2. Therefore, you will have to pay taxes on the fair market rate, even though your son did not pay any interest.
  3. You will have reportable income, but it will not be earned income.

 

IRS Tax Rules for Imputed Interest

4 replies

Employee
January 31, 2024

No.   "Earned" income is income you received for working.  

**Disclaimer: Every effort has been made to offer the most correct information possible. The poster disclaims any legal responsibility for the accuracy of the information that is contained in this post.**
tjlovenAuthor
January 31, 2024

Thank you.

JohnB5677
JohnB5677Answer
January 31, 2024

No, the principal that he pays back is not taxable; however, as far as the IRS is concerned, there is no such thing as an interest-free loan

  1. Loans without interest, or at below-market interest rates, are recharacterized so that the lender must recognize market-rate interest income.
  2. Therefore, you will have to pay taxes on the fair market rate, even though your son did not pay any interest.
  3. You will have reportable income, but it will not be earned income.

 

IRS Tax Rules for Imputed Interest

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Employee
January 31, 2024

Technically, you must report interest income equal to the interest he would have paid you if you charged interest that was at least the applicable federal minimum interest rate when the loan was made, even if you did not charge interest.  This is called imputed interest.  How likely will you get caught if you don't, I couldn't say.  And imputed interest, even if you report and pay tax on it, is not earned income.