Welcome to our latest round-up of the latest business and tax news for our clients. Please contact us if you want to talk about how these updates affect you. We are here to support you!
Have a great weekend.Kind regards,
Steve
Steven Hillman BSc (Hons) FCA
Chartered Accountant
Tel: 01934 444100
https://www.hillmans.co.uk
HMRC SCAM ALERT - STAY VIGILANT!
We want to alert you to a scam currently targeting businesses by impersonating HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC). Fraudsters are sending convincing emails and letters that claim to conduct compliance checks or verify financial information. These communications often request sensitive documents such as bank statements, VAT returns, and identification copies, using official-looking HMRC branding and fake email addresses like companies-review@hmrc-taxchecks.org to appear legitimate.
Key Indicators of the Scam:
• Unfamiliar Email Addresses: Legitimate HMRC emails will always end with @hmrc.gov.uk. Be cautious of any communication from addresses that deviate from this standard.
• Requests for Sensitive Information: HMRC will never ask for personal or financial information via email or text. They typically communicate through official letters or their secure online portal.
• Unexpected Correspondence: If you receive unsolicited communications claiming to be from HMRC, especially those requesting sensitive information, treat them with suspicion.
Recommended Actions:
• Do Not Respond: Avoid engaging with or providing any information to suspicious emails or letters.
• Report Suspicious Communications: Forward any dubious emails to HMRC at phishing@hmrc.gov.uk. Suspicious texts can be sent to 60599.
• Verify Authenticity: If you’re uncertain about the legitimacy of a communication, contact HMRC directly using official contact details available on the GOV.UK website.
Staying vigilant and following these guidelines can help protect your business from fraudulent activities. If you have any concerns or need further assistance, please don’t hesitate to reach out to us.
THERE’S STILL TIME FOR SOME YEAR END TAX PLANNING!
With the tax/financial year end approaching, now is a good time to check that you’re making the most of the available reliefs and allowances available to you. Please talk to us if you think any of the issues affect you.
Savings
If you have some spare cash, an obvious tax planning point might be to maximise your ISA allowances for the 2024/25 tax year (currently £20,000 per person). If you are 18 or over, but under 40, you can open a Lifetime ISA to save for your first home or retirement. You can put in up to £4,000 each year, until you’re 50, but you must make your first payment into your ISA before you’re 40. The government will add a 25% bonus to your savings, up to a maximum of £1,000 per year. The £4,000 Lifetime ISA limit counts towards the £20,000 ISA allowance.
Pension planning
You might also want to consider increasing your pension savings before 5 April 2025.
Under the current rules, the government adds to your pension contributions at the 20% basic rate. For instance, if you save £4,000 in a personal pension, the government tops this up to £5,000. If you are a higher rate taxpayer there is a further £1,000 tax relief when your tax liability is calculated, reducing the net cost to £3,000.
If you have income in excess of £100,000, your £12,570 personal allowance may be tapered. For every £2 of income in excess of £100,000, the personal allowance is reduced by £1, reducing to nil where net income is £125,140 or more. Additional pension contributions can be even more effective if your income is between £100,000 and £125,140; the gross pension contribution reduces net income for the purposes of calculating the reduction in the personal allowance. This is effectively a 60% tax saving.
Capital Allowances
Unless the business year end is 31 March or 5 April, the end of the tax year is not a significant date as far as capital allowances are concerned. In order for new equipment to attract capital allowances, the expenditure must be incurred on or before the end of the accounting period.
Limited companies and unincorporated businesses are entitled to a 100% write-off for the first £1 million spent on new and used equipment in a 12 month period. This “Annual Investment Allowance” (AIA) does not apply to motor cars, but there is a special 100% tax relief if you buy a new zero-emissions motor car.
In addition to the AIA, limited companies buying new (not second hand) equipment are entitled to fully expense the cost of most acquisitions against business profits. There is no financial limit on expenditure qualifying for this “full expensing” relief.
Where equipment is bought under a hire purchase contract, the capital allowances outlined above are available on the full cost of the asset provided it has been brought into use by the end of the accounting period. This is despite the fact that the payments may be spread over a number of months.
Capital Gains Tax (CGT) planning
You might wish to consider bringing forward capital gains to before 6 April 2025 if you haven’t used your £3,000 CGT annual exemption for 2024/25.
Paying Voluntary National Insurance Contributions
A retiring person needs to have 35 ‘qualifying years’ in order to claim the full state pension. For those with gaps in their record, usually due to not paying sufficient National Insurance Contributions (NICs), it is possible to ‘plug’ those gaps by paying Class 3 (Voluntary) NICs at £17.45 per week (£17.75 in 2025/26). Usually, it is only possible to pay Class 3 NICs in respect of the past six tax years, but there is currently an easement in place that allows taxpayers to pay Class 3 in respect of tax years going as far back as 2006. This easement expires on 5 April 2025, so it is worth considering making Class 3 payments before the opportunity is lost.
Stamp Duty Land Tax
Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) applies to purchases of property in England and Northern Ireland. The following SDLT nil-rate thresholds are set to revert to their previous levels from 1 April 2025, so if possible, accelerating a completion date could be worthwhile in order to make a saving!
For first-time buyers of residential property:
Threshold to 31 March 2025: £425,000
Threshold from 1 April 2025: £300,000
Single residential property:
Threshold to 31 March 2025: £250,000
Threshold from 1 April 2025: £125,000
Furnished Holiday Lettings
As covered in previous editions of this newsletter, Furnished Holiday Letting (FHL) status will be abolished from 6 April 2025. This will mean an end to the beneficial tax treatment that has been enjoyed by FHL owners up to now. If you own an FHL property, it may be worth considering the cessation of your FHL trade prior to 6 April 2025, so that your ability to claim Business Asset Disposal Relief in the normal period of three years post cessation can be preserved.
If you wish to continue operating your property as a holiday let, and are considering making any renovations to the property, it’s worth remembering that you can still claim capital allowances for expenditure on a qualifying FHL prior to 6 April 2025, so you may wish to accelerate such expenditure.
AVOID ANY DOUBLE CAB ‘HICCUPS’!
HMRC has published new guidance regarding a change in the interpretation of how Double-Cab Pickup (DCPU) vehicles should be classified for car benefit, capital allowances and some deductions from business profits purposes. Previously, HMRC accepted that if the payload of a DCPU was 1 tonne or more, it was a goods vehicle, not a car, and therefore qualified for beneficial capital allowances and benefit in kind treatment.
Following the government’s announcement in Autumn Budget 2024, from April 2025 (1st for companies, 6th for individuals), HMRC will no longer apply the payload test and instead consider the vehicle’s primary suitability when it was constructed. As DCPUs are ‘dual-purpose’ they are not primarily suited to carrying goods or burden and so will be classed as cars.
Transitional arrangements are in place, so if you are considering purchasing a DCPU, bear in mind that ordering a DCPU prior to 6 April 2025 could ensure that the more attractive benefit in kind tax treatment that applies to goods vehicles is available for a few more years. For capital allowances purposes, entering into a contract to purchase a DCPU prior to 1/6 April 2025 will secure the beneficial capital allowances treatment for goods vehicles, provided the date the obligation to pay for the DCPU is before 1 October 2025.
EMPLOYMENT EXPENSES
It is possible to claim Income Tax relief on eligible employment expenses that have not been reimbursed by your employer. If you file a self assessment tax return, relief must be claimed on the employment pages, but for employees who do not file a self assessment, it is possible to claim tax relief using an online form (P87). This follows a period during which HMRC had temporarily suspended the online form process due to a high number of ineligible claims being made. When making a claim it will be necessary to provide evidence of the expenses incurred.
Expenses on which tax relief can be claimed include:
- Working from home (if your employment contract requires you to do so).
- Repairing or replacing a uniform or small tools.
- Travel for business journeys (not journeys to or from work).
- Professional fees and subscriptions.
In 2024 we saw a lot of legal cases that examined the VAT rating of food and drink and it appears this trend is continuing into 2025! The VAT rating of food and drink has always been a contentious topic but in the case of Global By Nature Ltd v HMRC (TC09396) we can see the first time that a tribunal or court has examined the VAT law covering ‘sports drinks’.
VAT legislation allows food and drink (other than catering) to be zero-rated but there is quite a long list of foods and drinks that are exceptions to the zero-rating and so are subject to VAT at 20%. One such exception is “Sports drinks that are advertised or marketed as products designed to enhance physical performance, accelerate recovery after exercise or build bulk” and this includes powders or syrups that are used to make such drinks.
In the Tribunal, HMRC argued that the above legal wording provides a definition of ‘sports drinks’, in that they are drinks that are “advertised or marketed as products designed to enhance physical performance, accelerate recovery after exercise or build bulk”. They said that Global By Nature Ltd’s drink powders were sports drinks, they were marketed as such, and were standard rated.
Global by Nature Ltd (GBN) argued that their powders, whilst intended to be consumed as a drink, were not ‘sports drinks’ and, even if they were, they were not marketed as such.
The Tribunal agreed with GBN in that two tests should be used to determine whether a product met the conditions in the legislation:
- Is the product a sports drink?
- If so, is it advertised or marketed as products designed to enhance physical performance, accelerate recovery after exercise or build bulk?
‘Sports drink’ is not defined anywhere in law, so after examining various dictionary definitions and uses of the phrase, the tribunal decided that GBN’s powders did not contain enough carbohydrate to be considered sports drinks. As they were not sports drinks, how they were advertised or marketed did not need to be considered – they did not fall within the exception and could be zero rated.
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