• Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
  • Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!

Mileage - Only with Company Car ?

Collapse
X
  •  
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #11
    Originally posted by poster2034 View Post
    Just to clarify. I've been told I can not expense any petrol used on business trips if using a personal car. So I can't claim the 45p per mile (for first 10,000 miles). Just read the above. I need to get back to the accountants and clarify. Maybe there was some mis-communication !
    Understatement of the day (or year).

    "Mileage" and "petrol" are not the same thing. You cannot claim the money you spend on petrol. Instead, you can claim 45p per mile, which is a lot more. Quit worrying about the petrol and claim the 45p and be happy.

    Comment


      #12
      Originally posted by poster2034 View Post
      Just to clarify. I've been told I can not expense any petrol used on business trips if using a personal car. So I can't claim the 45p per mile (for first 10,000 miles). Just read the above. I need to get back to the accountants and clarify. Maybe there was some mis-communication !
      Mileage allowance (45p/mile) is only if you use a privately owned vehicle. This is intended to reimburse you, at a flat rate, for all running costs including fuel and maintenance/repairs.

      You cannot claim directly for petrol (or in fact any running cost) in a private vehicle because it's covered already by the 45p/mile.

      For a company owned vehicle, petrol, maintenance & repairs are all paid for by the company and therefore you cannot claim the 45p/mile. There may also be a BiK element for personal use.

      Capiche?

      IIRC there is an oddity about being able to reclaim fuel VAT on mileage in a private vehicle but this does not apply for those of us on VAT FRS.

      Comment


        #13
        Originally posted by Contreras View Post

        IIRC there is an oddity about being able to reclaim fuel VAT on mileage in a private vehicle but this does not apply for those of us on VAT FRS.
        Not an oddity. The FRS is the exception, whereby you cannot reclaim VAT on business costs, including reimbursing fuel costs.

        Otherwise the company can reclaim the VAT element of fuel receipts reimbursed depended on the Fuel allowances involved.

        Can I reclaim VAT on paying 45p mileage allowance? // TMT Accounting // Bristol
        "Being nice costs nothing and sometimes gets you extra bacon" - Pondlife.

        Comment


          #14
          Originally posted by DaveB View Post
          Not an oddity. The FRS is the exception, whereby you cannot reclaim VAT on business costs, including reimbursing fuel costs.

          Otherwise the company can reclaim the VAT element of fuel receipts reimbursed depended on the Fuel allowances involved.

          Can I reclaim VAT on paying 45p mileage allowance? // TMT Accounting // Bristol
          Well yes slightly odd that a business can reclaim VAT on a flat-rate allowance made to its employees to reimburse for their use of a private vehicle. Which other allowances can a business reclaim VAT on? Why restrict it to a notional percentage fuel element, and not the whole 45p for example?

          HRMC guidance -

          Input tax when fuel is purchased by employees

          Input tax when employees are paid a mileage allowance

          Edit1: Whilst the later (using flat rate allowance) makes no mention of receipts, I believe the article you linked to is conflating the two essentially correct on that point. Receipts (or other evidence) are required to reclaim the VAT, even though a car cannot run without fuel and receipts are not required for the mileage allowance itself, which is also an oddity.

          All irrelevant for those of us on FRS.

          Edit2: It might explain why umbrellas want to see VAT receipts against mileage claims.
          Last edited by Contreras; 18 August 2015, 16:10.

          Comment


            #15
            Originally posted by poster2034 View Post
            Just to clarify. I've been told I can not expense any petrol used on business trips if using a personal car. So I can't claim the 45p per mile (for first 10,000 miles). Just read the above. I need to get back to the accountants and clarify. Maybe there was some mis-communication !
            These are two completely different things. There lies your difficulty of understanding.
            No you can not expense any petrol.
            Yes you can claim the 45p per mile. That is not a petrol expense.

            Also, do not confuse "driving from home to place of work" as you described it, with driving from permanent place of work" (= your Ltd Co office = undoubtedly the same building as happens to be your personal home) to "temporary place of work" (= client's site).

            This is a Ltd Company we are talking about here, which is a completely different entity from you personally. It is your personal affair how you get from your home to your Ltd Company's place of business (which is its registered address or normal place of business, i.e. your house, but in its role of company office, not in its role of your home). It is a business matter how you get from there to where you happen to be sent to work at the moment.
            Last edited by expat; 18 August 2015, 17:47. Reason: Because autocorrect is for aunts.

            Comment


              #16
              Originally posted by expat View Post
              T

              Also, do not confuse "driving from home to place of work" as you described it, with driving from permanent place of work" (= your Ltd Co trading address = undoubtedly the same building as happens to be your personal home) to "temporary place of work" (= client's site).


              Companies can have a "trading address" and a "registered address" which may and may not be the same building.
              "You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR

              Comment


                #17
                Originally posted by SueEllen View Post


                Companies can have a "trading address" and a "registered address" which may and may not be the same building.
                I know, mine does, and they are not even in the same country ("country" in the sense of company registration). That is why I deliberately didn't use either phrase in my post, because that is not the point here, the point is the difference between the permanent address of the company, and the temporary address of the work currently being done.

                Comment


                  #18
                  Jeez...what a palaver
                  Some people are just NCOTBAC....
                  Blood in your poo

                  Comment


                    #19
                    Originally posted by WordIsBond View Post
                    Understatement of the day (or year).

                    "Mileage" and "petrol" are not the same thing. You cannot claim the money you spend on petrol. Instead, you can claim 45p per mile, which is a lot more.
                    That depends on what you're driving, greenie...
                    World's Best Martini

                    Comment


                      #20
                      Originally posted by WTFH View Post
                      You say you can claim mileage, but you can't claim "petrol mileage". Sorry, can you explain what you mean as "petrol mileage" compared with "mileage"?
                      Diesel mileage is fine

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X