Notional interest deduction rates for assessment year 2023
Notional interest deduction rates for the assessment year 2023
December 2022 – The notional interest deduction (NID) rates – i.e. the deduction for risk capital – are determined every year. The basic rate for the assessment year 2023 was published in the Belgian Official Gazette on 19 September 2022. That base rate is negative again, but…
Increase compared to assessment year 2022
The notional interest deduction is a fictitious interest deduction for companies with a lot of equity. The base rate of the deduction was -0.160% for tax year 2022.
That rate will rise to -0.057% for tax year 2023. That percentage is still negative and so the final rate of the notional interest deduction is still 0%.
SMEs do enjoy an increased rate, namely 0.5% above the basic rate. That is 0.443% for tax year 2023.
Calculation of the NID rate
The notional interest deduction rate is calculated on the basis of the average of the reference indices J related to 10-year linear bonds (OLOs) for July, August and September of the penultimate year before the tax year. For assessment year 2023, this was the average of the reference indices for July 2021 (0.061), August 2021 (-0.121) and September 2021 (-0.110) – which gives an average of -0.057%.
Small companies (SMEs) receive a bonus of 0.5%, so that they can apply a deduction of 0.443% for tax year 2023. For this rule, a small company is defined as a company with legal personality that does not exceed more than one of the following criteria on the balance sheet date of the last closed financial year (art. 1:24, §1 to §6 of the new CAC – Companies and Associations Code):
annual workforce average: 50
annual turnover, excluding VAT: 9 million euros
balance sheet total: 4.5 million euros.
Maximum
The new rate may never deviate by more than 1 percentage point from the rate of the previous assessment year.
The percentage may also never exceed 3% for large companies and 3.5% for SMEs.
Neither threshold was exceeded this year.
Risk capital calculation
To determine the basis of the notional interest deduction, you need to look at the average increase in equity over a five-year period. That is to say: the risk capital amounts to 1/5th of the positive difference between the adjusted equity at the end of the financial year itself and the adjusted equity of the 5th preceding financial year.
Budget conclave
One of the measures taken by the government to finance the budget deficit is to abolish the notional interest deduction for large companies. But since the deduction due to the low interest rates on bonds has already been '0' in recent years, the impact of this measure seems limited.
However, now that the interest on government bonds is starting to rise, there is indeed a saving for the government.
On the other hand, it is remarkable to note that when the Belgian notional interest deduction was introduced, the measure was received with applause. And just when the European Union starts to regard the notional interest deduction as an economically meaningful measure, Belgium partly abolishes that measure.