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Newsletter
November 2009 |
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As we have reported in previous newsletters HMRC do not request
information from taxpayers by email. You may have received the
latest scam email purporting to be from HMRC which is headed "Notice
of Unreported Income". The email links to a fake web site which
encourages you to download a "Fraud Application". This application
is simply a ruse to open a potentially damaging file on your PC.
This month we have also included articles on the current new
business rates revaluation, changes to minimum wage regulations, a
strategy for saving inheritance tax by utilising business property
relief and the pitfalls of paying your private bills through a
limited company.
Our next newsletter will be published on Tuesday 8 December
2009. |
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New
Business Rates Valuation |
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During October all businesses will receive their new business rates
valuation. This valuation will form the basis of business rates for the
next five years.
It is imperative that you check the fine print of the valuation to make
sure that the rateable value applied to your property is correct. The
rateable value is determined by a number of factors primarily the open
market rental value on the valuation date. The valuation date for the 2010
changes is 1 April 2008.
Appeals against the new valuations should be submitted before the 30
November 2009.
Business clients should also be aware that there are a number of
specific reliefs that you may be able to claim to reduce your business
rates - these include small business rate relief (England and Wales) and
transitional relief.
If you would like our assistance checking the valuation please call.
The Valuation Office Agency (VOA) website can be accessed at www.2010.voa.gov.uk/rli/en/basic
and has a number of useful FAQ sections.
Click here for a call back from our office regarding
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National
Minimum Wage Changes |
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From 1 October 2009 the new National Minimum Wage rates are:
- Workers aged 22 years and older £5.80 per hour
- Workers aged 18 -21 years £4.83 per hour, and
- All workers under 18 years who are no longer of compulsory school
age, £3.57 per hour
HM Revenue & Customs are responsible for monitoring the National
Minimum Wage. It is they who will fine you if you fail to pay the correct
rates. Currently fines are 50% of the underpayment due to workers subject
to a minimum £100 fine and maximum £5,000 fine.
From 1 October 2009 employers cannot use tips to make up wages to the
National Minimum Wage, regardless of whether employees receive them
through the payroll or in some other way.
Click here for a call back from our office regarding
this article. Back to top
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Business
property relief |
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Hidden away in the inheritance tax (IHT) regulations is a relief that
can have a significant impact on the amount of IHT payable by estates
which include business property.
What is business property?
It includes:
- A business or interest in an unincorporated business, 100% relief
available.
- A holding of shares in an unquoted company, 100% relief available.
- A controlling holding of shares in a quoted company (more than 50%
of the voting rights), 50% relief available.
- Land, buildings or plant and machinery used in a business of which
the deceased was a partner at the date of death or used by a company
controlled by the deceased, 50% relief available.
- Land, buildings or plant and machinery held in a trust where the
deceased had the right to benefit from the trust and the asset was used
in a business carried on by the deceased, 50% relief available.
Businesses which are mainly "investment" businesses are excluded from
the relief, but qualifying business assets can potentially make a
significant difference to IHT payable. Consider the following example.
At the date of his death Alfred had assets of £1m in cash on deposit
and shares in an unquoted trading company valued at £1m. The shares
qualified as business assets. In his will he left the shares to his wife,
who wanted to continue running the company and had her own cash assets.
Alfred's cash deposits were left to his daughter.
In this case the transfer of the shares from husband to wife was free
of inheritance tax charge so business property relief was wasted. However,
the £1m in cash left to his daughter would create an IHT bill of £270,000.
(£1m less nil rate band £325,000 at 40%)
There is a quite legitimate way to restructure the Will and pay no IHT
at all on Alfred's death. As a direct result of the required estate
planning, Alfred's wife would obtain ownership of the shares and the
daughter would have £1m in cash instead of £730,000 (£1m-£270,000
IHT).
Action point The facts in this example have been
somewhat simplified to demonstrate the importance of IHT planning. If you
have business assets in your estate it might be an idea to review your
will to ensure that maximum relief can be claimed. If you would like to
know how the planning works in the above example and if it would have
relevance to your estate planning, please call.
Click here for a call back from our office regarding
this article. Back to top
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Paying
private bills through your company |
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Before we examine this issue from a tax perspective we need to
emphasise the difference between limited companies and sole trader and
partnership businesses in the way that they distribute taxed profits to
the business owners.
Sole traders and partnerships are taxed under the self assessment
rules. Profits are allocated as agreed by the business owners and tax is
calculated on an individual basis based on this profit share. If sole
traders or partners withdraw the retained profit after tax this is treated
as drawings and not a business expense.
It is possible for sole traders and partners to draw out more than the
balance on their current account, to become overdrawn, and suffer no tax
consequence. Of course there is no long term future in doing this as funds
needed for the business, will be dissipated and the business will drift
towards insolvency. Businesses of this type pay tax on business profits,
not the amount taken out of the business by the owners.
Limited companies and their owner directors are treated very
differently. A limited company has a distinct legal identity of its own,
quite separate from its shareholders/directors. Money that is withdrawn by
the owners, in whatever way, always has a tax and possibly National
Insurance consequence except as a repayment as a loan from a director.
Essentially money withdrawn by directors will be treated as:
- salaried earnings or benefits, and/or
- dividends
So if you pay your private bills through a limited company what
happens?
If you already have money invested in your company that has been
credited to a director's loan account in your name, then the payment of a
private bill can be debited to this account, reducing the amount the
company owes you. In this case there is no tax consequence.
If you do not have money invested in your company in this way, any
private payments you make will create an overdrawn balance on your
director's loan - you will owe the company money. Now there are tax
consequences.
If your loan account does become overdrawn the following options and
tax effects are available to you.
- You repay the overdrawn balance. If this is done as soon as the
payments are made there should be no tax to pay.
- The company writes off the loan. The balance written off will be
treated as your earnings subject to PAYE and National Insurance, or in
certain circumstances, as a dividend.
- The director's loan remains unpaid. A benefit in kind charge will be
created equal to a statutory rate of interest for the time the loan is
overdrawn in a particular tax year. This benefit can be avoided if the
company charges your loan account with an equivalent interest charge.
Unpaid director's loans can also create an additional corporation tax
charge if the loan remains unpaid more than nine months after the
company's year end. This extra tax can be reclaimed by the company when
the loan is subsequently repaid, but there will be a delay.
Action point If you need to overdraw your loan with
the company it is better to plan for the tax consequences and perhaps find
a more suitable way to extract funds from the company. Please call if you
would like more information on this topic.
Click here for a call back from our office regarding
this article. Back to top
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Tax Diary
November/December 2009 |
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1 November 2009 - Due date for corporation tax due for
the year ended 31 January 2009.
19 November 2009 - PAYE and NIC deductions due for
month ended 5 November 2009. (If you pay your tax electronically the due
date is 22 November 2009)
19 November 2009 - Filing deadline for the CIS300
monthly return for the month ended 5 November 2009.
19 November 2009 - CIS tax deducted for the month
ended 5 November 2009 is payable by today.
1 December 2009 - Due date for corporation tax due for
the year ended 28 February 2009.
19 December 2009 - PAYE and NIC deductions due for
month ended 5 December 2009. (If you pay your tax electronically the due
date is 22 December 2009)
19 December 2009 - Filing deadline for the CIS300
monthly return for the month ended 5 December 2009
19 December 2009 - CIS tax deducted for the month
ended 5 October 2009 is payable by today.
Click here for a call back from our office regarding
this article. Back to top
DISCLAIMER - PLEASE NOTE: The ideas shared with you in
this email are intended to inform rather than advise. Taxpayers
circumstances do vary and if you feel that tax strategies we have outlined
may be beneficial it is important that you contact us before
implementation. If you do or do not take action as a result of reading
this newsletter, before receiving our written endorsement, we will accept
no responsibility for any financial loss incurred.
Jay & Jay Partnership Limited.
2 Chesterfield Buildings, Westbourne Place, Clifton, Bristol, BS8
1RU.
Telephone: 0117 973 5120 Fax: 0117 923 9807
Web: www.jayandjay.co.uk
Jay & Jay is a limited company, registered in England
& Wales with number 04433976. Registered for VAT under reference 793
4730 00.
Directors in the firm are members of the Association of
Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA). This body has their headquarters
in the UK and their rules of Professional Conduct can be obtained from
their web site.
Jay & Jay are authorised to act as statutory auditors
by the ACCA.
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