Hello Auditor

Are interest waivers considered in MAT computation?

Meaning of Interest Waiver

  • An interest waiver refers to the cancellation of interest obligations by a lender.
  • It may arise through restructuring, settlement, or compromise of loan terms.
  • The waived interest may have been earlier recognized as an expense.
  • It is treated as income when waived interest is credited in the Profit and Loss Account.
  • The waiver improves book profit in the year of accounting recognition.

Inclusion in Book Profit under MAT

  • MAT is computed on net profit as per the audited Profit and Loss Account.
  • Interest waived and credited to P&L is included in book profit for MAT.
  • There is no specific exclusion under Section 115JB for interest waivers.
  • All credited amounts form part of the MAT base unless explicitly excluded.
  • Even if the waiver is capital in nature, it is included if routed through P&L.

Adjustment of Earlier Add-Backs

  • If the waived interest was earlier disallowed in MAT computation, reversal may be permitted.
  • The deduction is allowed only if the original expense was added back under MAT.
  • A proper link must exist between the prior disallowance and current reversal.
  • Deduction cannot exceed the amount previously added back.
  • Year-wise reconciliation of MAT adjustments is necessary.

Capital vs Revenue Classification

  • Interest waiver related to working capital loans is treated as revenue in nature.
  • If it relates to term loans for fixed assets, it may be capital in nature.
  • Even capital waivers are included if routed through Profit and Loss Account.
  • Waivers directly credited to reserves without affecting P&L are excluded from MAT.
  • Classification must follow applicable accounting standards and disclosures.

Audit and Disclosure Compliance

  • Interest waiver details must be disclosed in financial statements.
  • Auditors verify classification and route of accounting entries.
  • Form 29B must reflect waiver-related income in MAT computation.
  • Proper documentation of loan settlement and ledger entries is essential.

Non-disclosure or incorrect classification can lead to tax disputes.

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