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3.6 Thin capitalization rules

3.6 Thin capitalization rules

Rules called "thin capitalization rules" limit the ability of trusts to deduct the interest they paid on debts owing to specified non-resident beneficiaries. The following trusts are subject to the rules if they earned business or property income in a taxation year and they are required to file an income tax return:

Such trusts cannot deduct the interest they paid on the portion of the debts owing to specified non-resident beneficiaries that exceed the authorized 1.5-to-1 debt-to-equity ratio.

If a portion of the debts owing to specified non-residents is allocated to the trust by a partnership and the interest paid by the partnership on this portion of debts owing is deductible in the calculation of the partnership's business or property income, the trust must add to its share of such an income an amount equal to the portion of the interest that exceeds its authorized debt-to-equity ratio.

More specifically, to determine the amount of interest that the trust cannot deduct (for the debts it contracted) or the amount that it must add to its share of a partnership's business or property income (for the debts contracted by the partnership), the trust must use the excess debt ratio, calculated as follows:

Refer to the definitions of the terms "specified beneficiary," "debts owing to specified non-residents" and "equity amount" in Part 6.

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