Originally posted by AQAsh
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EV Corp Tax relief, if bough in 1 financial year and car delivered in the next FY
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Originally posted by BlasterBates View PostThis link might help:
https://www.gov.uk/hmrc-internal-manuals/capital-allowances-manual/ca11800
Sounds to me like this is a grey area that only an experienced accountant will be able to advise on.Comment
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Originally posted by BlasterBates View PostThis link might help:
https://www.gov.uk/hmrc-internal-manuals/capital-allowances-manual/ca11800
Sounds to me like this is a grey area that only an experienced accountant will be able to advise on.Originally posted by Lance View Post
I got £5 that says this a poor assumption. If OP was sitting pretty they wouldn't be considering canceling the car.Comment
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Originally posted by AQAsh View PostFirst of all, thanks for the responses. Just to set the record straight,
1) No I am not winding the company up
2) I have a healthy bank Balance
3) I am not contracting as working on a separate Start-up and looking to close a round shortly. ( P.S) for the record not had issue with finding gig's so far thankfully.
The reason I wanted to know was simply which year does the corporation tax relief do I get as I will be beneficial.
The invoice date is in April and my end of year is end of May.
Normally a business cannot invoice another business until the goods have been delivered. Hence my suggestion that it is a deposit.
If you have a piece of paper, that says Invoice, and had a VAT # and a VAT amount paid then I believe that putting it against the CT for that invoice date is valid.
Anyway.... that all being said..... there is a fundamental difference. This is a car and they are treated differently to common or garden business costs....
Company car tax for business owners - Tax Guides (listentotaxman.com) this tells you a familiar story.
You get your dream car and it’s saving you money? With an on-the-road price of £36,875 and Corporation Tax at 19% you’re saving over £7,000, right? “I’m sure my accountant could tell me”, you think to yourself...
Five minutes later, you’re in the office getting ready to sign the paperwork. However, that little voice at the back of your head has now started panicking. “Maybe I should check this out with my accountant… it seems too good to be true”
That niggling voice, my friend, has just saved you thousands of pounds.
<snip>
Capital Allowances, however, are slightly different.
Capital Allowances require you to spread the cost of an asset over the expected useful life of the asset. The percentage that you can claim each year is decided in advance by HMRC. For the tax year 2019/20 the rates are as follows:
For cars with emissions of 110g/km or higher
6%
For cars with emissions between 51 and 110g/km
18%
For new cars with emissions of 50g/km or less
100%
You can claim a percentage of the cost for each year that you own the vehicle, until you have cumulatively claimed the full amount.
<snip>
A business cannot normally recover VAT on the purchase of a new car that is bought outright. The only circumstances under which you can recover VAT is if you can prove that the car is for business use only.
you sure you want to ask strangers on the internet rather than an accountant?Last edited by Lance; 10 October 2022, 15:57.See You Next TuesdayComment
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Originally posted by AQAsh View Post
Just to add, I always buy my cars Cash as the old saying goes " Buy only what you can afford" so finance / lease is off the table for me.
Particularly with houses or cars. (or planes, boats and women - a wise man said "If it flies, floats or f**ks, rent it")See You Next TuesdayComment
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Originally posted by AQAsh View Post
My OP is totally fine, only advantage for me was on the Tax relief, but then looking at the EV I guess they are first gen and will depreciate quite hard. Hence the reason of thinking to cancel.
Not sure what you think 1st gen EV is either. I would not call a BMW i4 1st gen.
As for depreciation, yes all new cars depreciate. It's one reason you want to do this right, and why finance is often a better option especially for a business
See You Next TuesdayComment
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Originally posted by BlasterBates View PostThis link might help:
https://www.gov.uk/hmrc-internal-manuals/capital-allowances-manual/ca11800
Sounds to me like this is a grey area that only an experienced accountant will be able to advise on.Originally posted by Lance View Post
ignoring finance because you can afford to pay cash is not necessarily the best idea.
Particularly with houses or cars. (or planes, boats and women - a wise man said "If it flies, floats or f**ks, rent it")Comment
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Originally posted by Lance View Post
ignoring finance because you can afford to pay cash is not necessarily the best idea.
Particularly with houses or cars. (or planes, boats and women - a wise man said "If it flies, floats or f**ks, rent it")Comment
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Originally posted by ladymuck View Post
I think that was Tarby'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!Comment
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