{"id":3241,"date":"2026-06-16T08:15:24","date_gmt":"2026-06-15T22:15:24","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/chipkie.com\/au\/?p=3241"},"modified":"2026-06-16T08:19:15","modified_gmt":"2026-06-15T22:19:15","slug":"fair-interest-rate-family-loan-2026","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chipkie.com\/au\/blog\/2026\/06\/16\/fair-interest-rate-family-loan-2026\/","title":{"rendered":"Fair Interest Rate Family Loan 2026 Guide"},"content":{"rendered":"
By The Chipkie Team<\/strong>, Personal Finance Editorial Team \u00b7 Last updated 15 June 2026<\/em><\/p>\n Lending money to a family member is one of the most generous things you can do \u2014 and one of the easiest to get wrong. With the Reserve Bank of Australia holding the cash rate at 4.10% for much of the past year and commercial mortgage rates sitting well above 6%, more Australians than ever are turning to the Bank of Mum and Dad. But what constitutes a fair interest rate on a family loan in 2026? Get it wrong and you risk damaging the relationship, losing money to inflation, or triggering an unwanted tax outcome from the ATO.<\/p>\n This guide walks you through how to set a rate that is genuinely fair, legally sound, and tax-smart \u2014 whether you’re lending $5,000 for a car or $200,000 toward a house deposit.<\/p>\n A fair rate balances the lender’s opportunity cost \u2014 what they would earn elsewhere \u2014 with the borrower’s ability to repay and the mutual goal of keeping the arrangement genuinely helpful. Most Australian families settle on a rate somewhere between 0% and the RBA cash rate, currently 4.10%. This gives the borrower a meaningful saving compared with bank rates while compensating the lender for at least some of the return they forgo.<\/p>\n There is no single “correct” answer to what interest to charge a family member. Consider these factors:<\/p>\n For loans between individual family members (not involving a company or trust), the ATO does not mandate a minimum interest rate. You can legally lend at 0%. However, the ATO can still scrutinise the arrangement \u2014 particularly if it suspects the “loan” is actually a gift, or if the lender is claiming deductions against interest income they’re not genuinely receiving.<\/p>\n The picture changes dramatically when a private company or family trust is involved. Under Division 7A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936<\/a>, loans from a private company to shareholders or their associates must be documented in a written agreement, charge interest at or above the benchmark rate (8.27% for 2025\u201326, as published by the Australian Taxation Office<\/a>), and be repaid within the maximum term. Fail any of these tests and the ATO treats the entire loan as an unfranked dividend \u2014 fully assessable in the borrower’s hands.<\/p>\n Here’s a quick comparison of common rate benchmarks:<\/p>\nKey Takeaways<\/h2>\n
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What makes a family loan interest rate “fair” in 2026?<\/h2>\n
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How do ATO rules affect family loan interest rates?<\/h2>\n