Winter 2007/08
Sell now and save tax!
Under the proposed new CGT rules you are advised to make any disposals
of assets which may qualify for business asset taper relief prior
to 5 April 2008, otherwise what would have been taxed at 10% will
be taxed at 18% if sold after 5 April 2008.
Sell later and save tax!
If you hold assets that only qualify for the non-business asset
taper relief then you are advised to sell after 5 April 2008. Currently
the tax rate for a higher rate taxpayer who has held an asset for
10 years from April 1998 will be 24% . However,
this will fall to 18% if sold after 5 April 2008.
Christmas partying
With Christmas once upon us again, don’t forget that annual
Christmas parties are tax allowable against business profits. If
the party is the only staff function you put on each year, then
you can spend up to £150 (including VAT) per head.
Christmas giving
Christmas time is a time for giving and don’t forget that
whilst giving is a splendid act in itself, why not also take advantage
of the gift aid relief provisions which allow higher rate taxpayers
to claim back 18% of the gross donation they make to charity.
Check your Wills
The Inheritance Tax nil rate band which currently stands
at £300,000 has now effectively been doubled to £600,000
for married couples. Hence it is no longer required for wills to
leave the 1st £300,000 to children to ensure that the band
is not wasted, although if your will already stipulates this then
there is no need to alter it.
For more advice on any of the above matters, please call our tax
partner Darren Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk and
he will be pleased to assist you.
Top
Spring
2007
Defer Salary and Save Tax?
The UK rate of corporation tax for small companies increased on
1 April 2007 from 19% to 20%. Depending on your company's year
end, it might make sense to defer any post-year-end directors'
salaries that would otherwise be voted, in order to obtain a higher
rate of tax relief in the following year.
Spend Money Now and Save Tax!
Gordon Brown is cutting the capital allowances available on all
purchases of business equipment and fittings from 25% to 20% with
effect from 6 April 2008. It might therefore be advisable to accelerate
any capital purchases into this current tax year.
Keep It Green and Save Even More!
With the environment high on the political agenda, the Government
has set up a separate capital allowances regime for so called “environmentally
friendly” items of plant and equipment and if any items you
acquire are on the list then your business is entitled to 100%
write off against your income.
Dividend or Salary?
If you run a small company and take advantage of the low salary
/ high dividend route as a legitimate way to avoid paying income
tax or national insurance, the figures for 2007/08 have now been
released and you should take note of these when planning how much
profit extraction you can make. If you take no salary then the
maximum dividend you can take without giving rise to a tax liability
is £35842. If however, you take a salary of say £4500,
then the dividend figure alters to circa £31700.
For more advice on any of the above matters, please call our tax
partner Darren Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk and he will be pleased to assist you.
Maximise Pension Relief!
The new rules for making personal pension contributions came into
force on 6 April 2006 and with it all the old rules were pretty
much scrapped. The maximum allowance for 2007/08 that can be put
into a pension scheme is £225,000, increasing from £215,000
the year before. Remember there is no longer any carry back or
forward facility so make sure you use as much as you can before
5 April 2008. For advice on pension planning, email david.higgins@glazers.co.uk or call David on 020 8458 7427.
Top
Autumn/Winter 2006
Some seasonal goodwill
Christmas
is fast approaching so make sure that office party is fun and
is fully tax deductible. That way both employees and employers
enjoy the occasion. Don't forget the limit per head is £150 (inclusive
of VAT).
Pay less inheritance tax!
Don't pay more Inheritance
Tax on your death than you have to; Gordon Brown won't thank
you for it! Make sure, if you can afford it, that you utilise
the £3000 annual exemption or the "gifts out of income" exemption,
which basically allows you to make regular gifts to people out
of your everyday income so long as you don't effectively deprive
yourself.
Pay less capital gains tax!
Do you have a holiday home? Maybe just acquired it? Or have had one a while but never used it much? Are you thinking of selling it and worried about the capital gains tax? Well it is possible to mitigate this by making an election which will assist in reducing the overall gain.
Non-resident? . Watch out!
A new Special Commissioner's decision now means that when looking at one's UK resident status, ignoring days of arrival and departure may not be correct. So it is important to obtain proper advice in this area before relying on this old rule. There will be tax consequences flowing from a person being deemed to be UK resident. Do not rely on the old 90-day rule!
Some more seasonal goodwill
At this time of year, charities are in need of fund-raising to help out people at Christmas and to look after those in need of food and shelter. If you are a 40% taxpayer, then you can give to these charities and receive a tax refund of the higher rate tax. The donation would need to be made under gift aid, which is very simple.
For more advice on these matters, please call our tax partner Darren Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk and he will be pleased to assist you.
Top
Spring/Summer 2006
Accelerate your Tax Relief on Equipment!
The Chancellor has brought back the 50% first year allowance on plant and machinery for one year commencing on 1 April 2006 for companies and 6 April 2006 for individuals and partnerships. Make sure you accelerate those spending plans on computers and other equipment to ensure you benefit from the allowance which may be phased out after 31 March / 5 April 2007.
Saving tax with the EIS
With effect from 6 April 2006 the
limit on investing in Enterprise Investment Schemes (EIS) doubles to £400,000, which means that a maximum income tax relief of £80,000
is available. EIS also allows for the deferral of capital gains without
limit and so is a very useful tax shelter.
A Tax-Free Perk
Looking for a cheap and useful tax-free perk to give your employees? - well how about a mobile phone? All calls made will be allowable for tax and no benefit arises to the employee, as long as the contract is between the employer and the phone provider .Please note that under new rules only one phone per employee now qualifies.
Tax-Efficient Company Set-Up
Looking to set up in business and
use a limited company for the purpose? Well a tax-efficient way of
structuring such a company would be to have a minimal share capital
of say £100 and then introduce the rest of the funds as loans to the
company. This way, when the company can afford to, it can repay your
loans tax-free and even pay you a commercial rate of interest on the
loan. This is a tax-efficient way of extracting money too, as interest,
although taxable, bears no national insurance and the company should
get a tax deduction for it.
Offshore Bank Accounts - Beware The Revenue!
Do you have an offshore bank account
which earns interest? If so, are you declaring the interest each tax
year to the tax man? If not you should be as now the UK Revenue & Customs
are obtaining information for taxpayers who hold overseas accounts
and are enquiring into their tax affairs where no interest has been
declared. Please note if you are non-UK domiciled then you may be able
to get this interest UK tax free.
For more advice on these matters, please call our tax partner Darren Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk and he will be pleased to assist you.
Top
Winter
2005/2006
It’s time to submit your
tax return!
If you
have still not filed your income tax return for the year ended 5
April 2005, now is the time to collate the information needed to
do so. There is an automatic penalty of £100 for returns not
filed by 31 January.
Investing
for your child's future
Many thousands
of parents who have received Child Trust Fund (CTF) vouchers have
not yet invested in a CTF account and are losing the benefit of
tax-free returns.
The CTF is a long-term savings and investment arrangement.
It is started with the initial voucher worth at least £250
(the amount depends on the child’s date of birth, and family
income). Relatives, friends and the child themselves can then contribute
up to £1,200 a year in total into the account. The fund is
entirely tax free and the child will have access to the money once
they turn 18.
New construction industry rules
- time to sort things out
The government has postponed the introduction of
the tough new rules by 12 months, to April 2007. Any business involved
in construction work should use the extra time to ensure that its
existing arrangements are in order; in particular by ensuring that
all workers paid under the scheme are genuinely self-employed. We
are happy to advise on this thorny issue.
For more advice on these matters, please call our
tax partner Darren Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
and he will be pleased to assist you.
VAT receipts and employee mileage
claims
HM Revenue & Customs has announced changes
to the procedures for input VAT recovery by employers on employees'
mileage allowances. In future employees will have to produce a garage
VAT receipt to support the claim for expenses made. Without this
supporting receipt the employer will not be able to reclaim the
input VAT on the fuel element of the expenses. The changes become
effective from 1 January 2006.
Top
December
2005
31 December deadline for overseas
businesses to reclaim VAT
A non-EU business may reclaim the VAT incurred
on UK expenses, even though the business is not registered for VAT
here.
This can be very useful if your business is not
required to be register for UK VAT - perhaps because you make no
sales here – but your directors or staff have attended exhibitions
or training events in this country.
However there are strict deadlines, and you only
have until 31 December 2005 to claim back VAT incurred in the year
to June 2005.
For more advice, please call our tax partner Darren
Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
and he will be pleased to assist you.
Top
November
2005
A little tax relief for entertaining
As the festive season approaches, the taxman offers
to help you enjoy your Christmas party. Your firm may claim a tax
deduction for the cost of the event, and no tax is paid by staff
for the 'benefit' they enjoy by attending. The only conditions are
that the event is open to staff generally (and is not restricted
to a particular group, such as directors) and that the cost per
head does not exceed £150. The firm may also recover all VAT
on the cost of the event if certain conditions are met.
While the cost of 'business entertaining' is rarely
tax-deductible, a recent tax tribunal decision reminds us that relief
remains available for promotional events. In that case, a company
held a function at a hotel to publicise its training courses. While
it could not claim tax relief for the food and drink it provided,
it was allowed a deduction for the room hire charges which, the
tribunal felt, were incurred for the purposes of business advertising
or promotion.
Other tax free arrangements
While many benefits in kind and expenses payments
are now quite heavily taxed, some arrangements remain attractive.
Where an employer provides an employee with a
mobile phone, there is no tax charge on the benefit
of any personal use of the phone. Also, an employee may receive
generous tax free mileage allowances where they
use their own car for business purposes. The tax free allowances
per mile are:
- 40p for the first 10,000 miles in a year
- 25p thereafter
- An extra 5p for every other employee they carry as a passenger
There are also generous rules for computers and
bicycles made available to staff, and for interest
free loans of up to £5,000.
Regular gifts to family members
If you are keen to pass money down to members of
your family while you are still alive, so as to minimise inheritance
tax (IHT) on your death, you may wish to take advantage of the exemption
for 'normal expenditure out of income'.
This allows you to make gifts out of your current
income, and no tax arises provided that you are still left with
enough money to live on, and that such gifts are made on a regular
basis. Thus it is possible, if your income permits, to give large
amounts to your family each year, potentially saving £400
for every £1,000 you give away.
When an investment fails
If you have invested cash for shares in a limited
company, and the business has failed, help may be at hand from the
taxman. Even without selling your shares, you may be able to claim
that you have made a capital loss which may be set against any capital
gains you make in the same year, or in subsequent years. Even better,
if the right conditions exist, it may be possible to convert the
capital loss into an income tax loss, which could give rise to a
refund of tax paid on your income in the year.
For more advice on these matters, please call our
tax partner Darren Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
and he will be pleased to assist you.
Top
October 2005
Death and Taxes
The government raises £2.5 billion a year
from inheritance tax (IHT) - which may claim 40% of your estate
at death after taking account of certain reliefs.
The 'spouse exemption' allows you to leave your
entire estate to your widow or widower, to help ensure that that
they can live out their days in comfort. But such a gift wastes
the 'nil rate band', which enables you to pass £275,000 down
to your children or grandchildren tax-free.
A 'nil rate band discretionary trust' offers you
the benefits of both reliefs. You exploit the nil rate band by placing
up to £275,000 in trust, while your widow or widower may enjoy
benefits from that capital during their lifetime. For more information
on such arrangements, call our Director of Financial Services David
Higgins on 020 8458 7427 or email david.higgins@glazers.co.uk
and he will be happy to help you.
Saving CGT on a second home
Capital gains tax (CGT) is not charged on your
'main residence', and where you have more than one residence - e.g.
a holiday home - you may elect which property should be exempt from
CGT. Gains on the other property are then taxable.
However, the taxman accepts that subtle variations
of such a 'main residence election' can effectively give you the
benefit of tax free gains on two properties at the same time. For
more information, please call our tax partner Darren Specterman
on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
and he will be pleased to assist you.
Assets or shares?
If you are thinking of buying a business currently
owned by another company, you need to consider whether to acquire
the business assets and any goodwill, or simply purchase the shares
in the company that owns them. This decision can have major tax
implications and you should seek advice before entering any agreement.
For example, the vendor may prefer to sell the
shares (perhaps to minimise their own tax liabilities), but then
you would pay stamp duty at 0.5% and forfeit the up-front tax relief
available when you purchase the assets themselves. For more information,
please call our tax partner Darren Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or
email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
and he will be pleased to assist you.
Salary or dividend
If your company is approaching the end of a profitable
year, you may be wondering whether to pay yourself a salary or dividend,
or both. While it is often advantageous to take a substantial dividend,
we would usually advise that you also take a small salary of at
least £4,800. This ensures that you receive the benefit of your
personal tax allowance, and this arrangement also contributes towards
your state pension without you or the company having to pay anything
towards it! For more information, please call our tax partner Darren
Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
and he will be pleased to assist you.
Top
September
2005
Thinking of spending time abroad?
If you are leaving the UK to work or live abroad,
tax may not be the first thing on your mind. But there are many
opportunities if you plan your affairs carefully. These include:
- Obtaining
a tax refund when you leave the UK
- Organising
the tax side of arrangements to rent out a UK property, so that
income tax is minimised and you preserve any Capital Gains Tax
exemption
- Enjoying
the other tax exemptions associated with non-resident, and possibly
non-domiciled, status
But there are pitfalls too. For many years emigrants
have been allowed to visit the UK for up to 90 days a year without
losing the benefits of non-resident status, but this is uncertain
following the recent decision in Shepherd v HMRC, where
an airline pilot who continued to spend 80 days a year in the UK
was held to have remained UK-resident as he had not made 'a distinct
break' from this country. This reflects a tougher attitude by HM
Revenue & Customs towards those seeking the benefits of non-residence.
For advice, please call our tax partner Darren
Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
and he will be pleased to help you.
VAT recovery on company car purchases
It is often assumed that a company cannot reclaim
the VAT it pays on the purchase of a motor car.
This is because, with a few limited exceptions,
the law says that VAT cannot be recovered if it is intended that
the car be 'made available for private use', irrespective of whether
it is actually used for non-business purposes.
In practice it has proved extremely difficult to
persuade VAT inspectors of the absence of an intention to allow
private use, and so VAT recovery is invariably disallowed.
A chink of light has appeared in a recent High
Court decision, where a company was allowed to reclaim the VAT on
the purchase of a Mercedes Benz. In this case:
- The
car was purchased by the company for the director to use for
business travel
- It
was garaged near the company premises where the keys were kept
- The
director had another car which was used for private motoring
- There
was a board minute that the car should not be used for any private
motoring
- It
would have been a breach of the director’s terms of
employment to use the car for non-business purposes
- The
company’s insurance policy expressly excluded non-business
travel
While Customs may not like this decision, it will
now be more difficult for them to oppose a claim for VAT recovery
if all these conditions are met.
Also, in such cases there should not be any taxable
‘benefit-in-kind’, since such charges do not apply to
cars which are used solely for business travel.
For advice, please call our tax partner Darren
Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
and he will be pleased to help you.
Offset mortgages offer a high tax-free
return on your savings
Do you think it is unfair that you should have
to pay income tax on the bank or building society interest that
you earn, while you receive no tax relief on the mortgage interest
you pay?
If so, you might wish to consider converting to
an offset mortgage.
These mortgages allow you to hold your savings
in an instant access account attached to the main mortgage account.
Interest is calculated – at your mortgage rate – on
the savings you hold, and this amount is simply deducted from the
interest due on your mortgage.
There are various advantages to this:
- You
get a good return on your savings (equivalent to your mortgage
rate)
- This
is effectively tax free (there is nothing to
declare on your tax return)
- The
mortgage is paid off quicker as monthly mortgage repayments
that would have been absorbed by interest charges go to pay
off capital instead
Offset mortgages can be especially useful for people
holding large sums for specific purposes, such as paying an income
tax or VAT bill.
For more information please call Stephen Goldman
of Glazers Financial Services on 020 8458 7427 or email stephen.goldman@glazers.co.uk
and he will be happy to assist you.
Top
August
2005
Pension
planning
Next year will see the most significant pensions
changes in the last 15 years. From 6 April 2006 you will be able
to:
make much larger pension contributions
to save more income or corporation tax.
invest in a wider range of assets, including buy-to-let
properties or second homes.
transact with your pension i.e. buy assets from it
or sell and transfer assets to it, making your pension a much more
flexible, tax-saving tool.
These changes open up some good tax-saving and
investment planning opportunities and you can start preparing for
them now. But some people may lose valuable benefits under the existing
rules, particularly:
business owners
those with company or occupational pension schemes
those with large pension funds
You will need to check how you will be affected
and may need to take action before 6 April 2006. For example:
you may lose the right to a large
tax-free cash sum from your pension
you may be caught with penalty tax of up to 55% on
your pension assets over the Lifetime Allowance
To talk through the pension changes, how they might
affect you and what action you need to take now, to prepare for,
or protect yourself against the new rules, please call Ben Gibbs
on 020 8458 7427 or email ben.gibbs@glazers.co.uk
Don't ignore those benefits and expenses
Employers have now passed the 6 July deadline for
filing P11D returns of benefits and expenses for 2004/05, and those
who have not done so now face an automatic penalty of at least £100.
Nevertheless, it is still worth getting the return in quickly, as
the penalty will increase for every month that you are late.
We have advised previously that employers can cut
down on this annual hassle by obtaining a 'dispensation' from reporting
certain items where clearly no tax charge would arise, e.g. reimbursement
of business travel expenditure. It is sometimes thought that 'one-person
companies' cannot qualify for dispensations as their expense claims
are not independently checked within the business, but HM Revenue
& Customs have indicated that even these companies can get some
relief. If you want any help with this, please call our tax partner
Darren Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
and he will be pleased to assist you.
Passing on your assets
While the Government says that relatively few deceased
estates attract inheritance tax (IHT), this is little comfort to
anyone whose home is worth more than the £275,000 IHT threshold.
Since April this year it is virtually impossible to make a tax-effective
gift of your property while continuing to live there, but one useful
exception covers circumstances where a child shares the same home
as their elderly parent.
'Business property' may also be 100% exempt from
IHT, and this includes the business of a sole trader or partner,
or shares in a company. But there are detailed conditions to be
met in each case. For advice on inheritance tax, please call our
tax partner Darren Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
who will be pleased to help you.
Running your business from home
More and more people are opting to work from home,
but it is often thought that establishing an office in a spare bedroom
will trigger a capital gains tax bill when you come to sell the
property. In fact the rules are more generous.
Your property may continue to qualify for complete
exemption from capital gains tax provided no part of it is used
'exclusively' for business purposes. So provided the room in which
you work is sometimes used for domestic purposes - perhaps you keep
the second TV in there, for those evenings when your viewing tastes
differ from others in the household - you may escape CGT completely.
July
2005
Offshore
bank accounts to be taxed
The European Savings Directive comes into force
this month. If you have a bank account in the Channel Islands or
the Isle of Man, a 15% withholding tax will now be deducted from
all interest paid, unless you agree with the bank to send details
of your account and regular reports of interest earned to the tax
authorities instead.
However, you can claim exemption from these new
rules if you are not domiciled in the UK. Domicile is a complex
concept, but in simple terms you are probably not domiciled here
if you were born abroad and do not intend to live in the UK permanently.
We are happy to advise on domicile and claiming exemption from the
new Directive. Please call our tax partner Darren Specterman on
020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
who will be pleased to assist you.
Jones family fight back
Geoff Jones is appealing against the High Court's
ruling that dividends received by his wife from their family company
are taxable at his own top tax rate (see Tax Tips June 2005). The
Professional Contractors Group, which is supporting the appeal,
says: "We believe that this judgment undermines the self-assessment
tax system by leaving a host of questions unanswered. It could affect
hundreds of thousands of small family businesses who've shared the
risk and hard work of running a business, expecting to share in
the rewards." We will keep you posted on developments. And in the
meantime, if you have a family company and want to pay dividends
to both spouses, tread carefully!
Cut down needless paperwork - and save tax
6 July is the deadline for employers to file P11Ds,
reporting expenses payments and benefits-in-kind received by directors
and employees during 2004-05. P11Ds are required even if you can
demonstrate that the payments or 'benefits' were solely for business
purposes, although the employee or director must then file another
form to claim the tax exemption. Employers who ignore these requirements
face financial penalties.
This annual merry-go-round may be avoided through
a 'dispensation' whereby the tax office agrees that items provided
solely for business purposes need not be reported, provided there
are adequate controls in place. We have extensive experience of
obtaining dispensations and often find that the exercise reveals
tax-saving opportunities - e.g. exploiting the 40p tax-free mileage
allowance, special tax rules on mobile phones, and tax free allowances
for household costs of employees who regularly work at home.
For more information, call Darren Specterman on
020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
who will be pleased to help.
Self assessment - Tax payment deadline
looms
Don't forget that the second interim payment of
income tax for 2004/05 falls due by 31 July, and that interest is
charged on late payments at 7.5%.
Interim payments are based on your tax liability
for 2003/04, but these can be reduced if your tax fell in 2004/05.
And even now, it is not too late to reduce that tax bill by making
a payment into a personal pension and electing for this to be carried
back. For more information on pensions, call our Director of Financial
Services David Higgins on 020 8458 7427 or email david.higgins@glazers.co.uk
who will be happy to help you.
June
2005
Tax
charge on family company dividends
The High Court has supported another Revenue attack
on small company dividends. In the Arctic Systems
case, Geoff and Diana Jones each owned one share in a company which
delivered Mr Jones' IT consultancy services. He took a modest salary,
so that most of the company's income could be paid out as dividends.
Relying on anti-avoidance legislation, HM Revenue and Customs argued
that Mrs Jones' dividends were taxable at her husband's higher tax
rate, and this has now been upheld by the High Court.
The decision highlights the need for all small
companies to plan their remuneration and dividend strategies carefully.
The judge made it clear that the Revenue should not attack arrangements
where the working partner is paid the going rate for the work done.
If you need help, please call our tax partner Darren Specterman
on 020 8458 7427 or e-mail darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
and he will be pleased to assist.
Tax relief to buy a second home
These days loans taken out by individuals to finance
personal expenditure do not enjoy tax relief, but the official guidance
of HM Revenue and Customs confirms that relief may be available
where a landlord remortgages a rented property to release funds
for personal needs. This could be to purchase a second home, to
meet school fees or other major items of expenditure. Not surprisingly,
there are conditions to be met and we shall be happy to advise.
Contact our tax partner Darren Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
Watch those dreaded forms
The 6th July deadline is looming for companies
to submit Form 42 for the year to April
2005. A wide variety of transactions in company shares and other
securities have to be reported, on pain of a £300 penalty
for each failure. There are, however, some useful exceptions including
most transfers in the normal course of domestic relationships. If
you need advice on this issue, please call our tax partner Darren
Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or e-mail darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
and he will be happy to help.
Other forms should be handled with special care. HM Revenue and
Customs' website warns that some individuals employed outside the
UK have received a letter and Form P86
that purport to come from its offices, which ask for personal information
including bank account details. It says the letters - signed by
Fiona Delaney - are fakes and urges recipients to report such letters
to the police.
Some help with your payroll
By law, most employees are entitled to Statutory
Sick Pay (SSP) if they are away from work through illness for four
or more days. The rules are horrendously complex, but some help
is at hand with the publication of an SSP calculator
on HM Revenue and Customs'' website at http://sspcalculator.inlandrevenue.gov.uk/SSP01.aspx.
But you may still prefer to avoid such hassles altogether by appointing
Glazers to help with your payroll. Call our payroll manager Avril
Wildman on 020 8458 7427 or e-mail avril.wildman@glazers.co.uk
and she will be happy to discuss your requirements.
Has your business suffered from the failure
of MG Rover?
HM Revenue and Customs says it will respond constructively
and speedily to requests for special treatment by businesses facing
cash-flow problems in consequence of MG Rover going into administration,
and has set up a special helpline - 01604 731 678 - to deal with
any query. Sadly they are not offering help to car owners now in
possession of worthless warranties!
Top
May
2005
1. All
employers reading this, make sure you don't get stung with a late
filing penalty for submitting your Employer's Annual Return form
P35 late. The deadline is 19th May, which by concession extends
to 26th May 2005. The penalty for late submission is pretty severe,
being £100 per month late.
If you need help with your payroll please call our payroll manager
Manjula Kanbi on 020 8458 7427 or email manjula.kanbi@glazers.co.uk
and our payroll team will be pleased to assist.
2. Are you using your own car for work? Well, did you know that
you can claim a tax-free mileage allowance from the Inland Revenue
even if your employer doesn't pay it. The rate is 40p for the first
10,000 business miles, thereafter 25p. So make sure you keep an
accurate log of these miles just in case the taxman wants proof.
3. Have you recently de-registered from VAT? If you have, and you
are now receiving invoices for goods and services supplied to you,
then don't panic - you will still be able to reclaim the VAT on
invoices. There is a 3 year window and you may make a claim on the
form VAT 427.
If you need help with this please call our tax partner Darren Specterman
on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
and he will be pleased to assist.
4. Are you a landlord renting out residential property? Do you know
what items of expenditure you can claim tax relief on and those
you cannot? Well, with effect from 6 April 2004 landlords can now
claim a 100% deduction for the cost of cavity wall or loft insulation,
even solid wall insulation.
So if you want advice on all manner of property taxation please
call our tax partner Darren Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or email
darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
and he will be pleased to assist.
5. "Don't look a gift horse in the mouth" - from April
2005 the Government is setting up Child Trust Funds (CTF) and for
every child born after 1 September 2002 the Government will contribute
£250. Family and friends can contribute up to £1200
a year and the interest earned will be tax-free. Your child can't
touch the money until they reach the age of 18.
If you want more advice and assistance on savings, investments,
managing your finances, or pension advice please contact our Director
of Financial Services David Higgins on 020 8458 7427 or email david.higgins@glazers.co.uk
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April
2005
1. Although
the 100% capital allowance for computers and the 50% allowance for
fixtures and fittings have now gone , it is still possible to claim
a 40% allowance in the first year on all these items if your business
is small or medium. The definitions of these changed quite recently
so do not forget to check these out, otherwise you may be claiming
only 25% instead of the 40% your business is entitled to. If you
want to know more about this please call our tax partner Darren
Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
2. Extracting profits out of your company tax-efficiently is probably
one of the most important items on your agenda when you see your
accountant. Well, one very tax-efficient method is for your company
to make a pension contribution into your own personal scheme. This
payment attracts corporation tax relief for the company and is both
tax and NI free. If you want to know more about the tax planning
aspects of this please call our tax partner Darren Specterman on
020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk,
or for expert pension advice call David Higgins of Glazers Financial
Services on 020 8458 7427 or email david.higgins@glazers.co.uk
3. This month is the deadline for paying any PAYE/NI on those year-end
bonuses. The date for payment is 19th April 2005 and if payment
is made after this date then interest will be due on late payment.
So to avoid any interest charges please be sure to make your payment
on time.
4. Individuals who are not domiciled in the UK (this normally means
your father was born outside of the UK) can take advantage of preferential
tax treatment in connection with income and capital gains tax. This
basically means that you only pay UK tax on income and capital gains
made offshore if you remit them into the UK. In order to ensure
that you are treated as non-UK domiciled you may wish to ask the
Inland Revenue for a domicile ruling which can give you a degree
of clarity in this respect.
If you want to know more about this please call our tax partner
Darren Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
5. If you are a professional firm (for example solicitors or architects)
then you may have read recently about a change that is to come into
force in connection with the valuation of work in progress. This
change which comes into effect for accounting periods ending on
or after 22 June 2005 could create major one-off tax bills, as the
idea behind the change is to bring into account income earned which
has not yet been invoiced.
The best strategy is likely to be to bill out as much work in progress
as possible before the year end. There is also a get-out clause
for smaller businesses.
Please call our tax partner Darren Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or
email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk
if you want to know more.
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March
2005
With the end of the tax year
approaching fast, this month's tips concentrate on pre-year-end
tax planning.
1. The amount of capital gains you can make tax-free is £8200
for the year. So if you wish to make full use of this exemption
you must ensure that any disposals of capital assets are made by
5 April 2005. If you require assistance or advice in this complex
area of tax please do not hesitate to contact our tax partner Darren
Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk.
2. Are you a 40% taxpayer and wish to reduce your 2004/05 tax liability?
Well, making a pension contribution by 5 April will achieve the
desired result. Essentially for every £1 you pay into the
pension, your tax liability will be reduced by 18p. If you require
any assistance on pension planning please call our Director of Financial
Services David Higgins on 020 8458 7427 or email david.higgins@glazers.co.uk.
3. One of the many Inheritance Tax exemptions is the annual exemption.
This allows an individual to give away £3000 a year tax-free,
per tax year. There is also a limited carry forward of the previous
year's exemption if not used up. Once again, you have until midnight
on April 5th to make these gifts.
4. April 5th is also the deadline for topping up those ISA's (Individual
Savings Accounts). Remember, you can put up to £3000 into
a cash ISA, or £3000 into a stocks and shares ISA. So if you
want to make the most of these tax-efficient accounts (all interest
is tax-free inside the account) ensure you save by the 5 April deadline.
If you require any financial advice in this area please call our
Director of Financial Services David Higgins on 020 8458 7427 or
email david.higgins@glazers.co.uk.
5. If you qualify as a small business, then you can currently claim
50% first-year allowances on the acquisition of plant and machinery.
However, this rate will reduce to 40% for items acquired after 31
March 2005 (for Companies) and 5 April 2005 (for individuals). If
you need advice in this area please do not hesitate to contact our
tax partner Darren Specterman on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk.
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February
2005
1. Van drivers with company
vans who have private use are assessed to tax on a scale charge
of £500 per annum. However, from 6 April 2005 if you can
show that the van is used mainly for business travel then no
personal benefit charge will arise. In this respect the Inland
Revenue ignore travel from home to work and back.
2. Are you VAT registered? If so, have you considered using the
flat rate scheme? This scheme basically pigeon-holes various trades
into differing VAT rates, so for example an IT consultant would
only be liable to pay VAT at 13.5%, thus he still charges his customers
17.5% VAT and keeps the difference. The downside is that you cannot
claim any VAT on your expenses. This scheme just got better as the
rates have been reduced, thus allowing you to keep even more.
If you require assistance calculating
whether the flat rate scheme would benefit you, or have any other
VAT questions, then please call our VAT consultant Simon Levine
on 020 8458 7427 or email simon.levine@glazers.co.uk.
3. Did you pay your self-assessment tax for 2003/04 on time? If
you have not paid it yet and you want to avoid a 5% surcharge, then
make sure the tax is paid by 28 February at the latest. If you need
assistance or advice on any personal tax issues please call our
personal tax partner Pratima Patel on 020 8458 7427 or email pratima.patel@glazers.co.uk.
4. Are you claiming tax relief for website expenditure? According
to the Inland Revenue, building a website is not allowable as a
trading expense, but updating and maintaining it is. Well our tip
is that if you approach this carefully in a way that circumvents
the Revenue's argument, you can then claim a tax deduction for pretty
much all the expenditure. If you want to know more about this area
of taxation please contact our corporate tax partner Darren Specterman
on 020 8458 7427 or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk.
and he will be happy to assist.
5. Have you made a significant capital gain this tax year and would
welcome advice on the various ways of mitigating the tax on it?
Well our Director of Financial Services David Higgins can help you.
He can advise on various tax shelters, such as Enterprise Investment
Schemes, Film Partnerships and Technology Partnerships.
If you want to save tax give
David a call on 020 8458 7427 or email david.higgins@glazers.co.uk.
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January
2005
1. If you have given substantial
amounts to charity, then why not consider electing to carry back
gift aid donations paid between 6 April 2004 and 31 January 2005
to the tax year 2003/04 and achieve a reduction in your January
tax liability.
2. In order to avoid late tax return filing penalties you should
either ensure all your 2003/04 tax is paid by 31 January 2005,
or submit your tax return by that date. The normal late-filing
penalty is £100, but the penalty cannot be more than the
amount of tax unpaid.
3. If you want to top up your pension and carry back this payment
to 2003/04, then you must make the payment at the latest by 31 January
2005. You need to make the claim to carry back by this date as well.
Remember this useful carry-back facility can give rise to tax refunds
which can be useful at this time of year.
4. Have you made a significant capital gain this tax year and would
welcome advice on the various ways of mitigating the tax on it?
Well our Financial Services team can probably help you. They can
advise on various tax shelters, such as Enterprise Investment Schemes,
Film Partnerships and Technology Partnerships. If you want to save
tax, give our Financial Services Director, David Higgins, a call
on 020 8458 7427 or email david.higgins@glazers.co.uk.
5. Are you making the most of tax-free benefits-in-kind for your
staff? For example, providing mobile phones, lending computers,
paying relocation expenses, etc. There are many more ways of paying
your staff tax-efficiently which you could be taking advantage of.
If you would like help with any of the points above, contact either
of our tax partners, Darren Specterman or Pratima Patel, on 020
8458 7427, or email darren.specterman@glazers.co.uk.
Top
Please remember these are only general
tips and it is recommended that you seek specific professional advice
before attempting to implement any of them. To make sure you go
about it the right way, email our tax planning partner Darren
Specterman or call him on 020 8458 7427. |