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Autumn Statement 2016

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    Originally posted by TheCyclingProgrammer View Post
    https://www.gov.uk/government/public...technical-note

    Only expenditure on goods counts, and capital expenditure and employee food and drink costs are excluded. IT equipment - yes if its not treated as capital expenditure, stationary yes but how much stationary does the average contract spend their money on? Accountancy is not a purchase of goods.



    Very unlikely I spend that much on *goods*. I do spend more than that on other things.



    More services.
    Travel and subsistence isn't *NOT* a service.
    Last edited by riffpie; 23 November 2016, 15:52.

    Comment


      Originally posted by adubya View Post
      Don't you ?
      No.

      Cake is VAT exempt ;-)
      http://www.cih.org/news-article/disp...housing_market

      Comment


        Originally posted by riffpie View Post
        Travel and subsistence isn't a service.
        I'm not sure in what way travel (or accommodation) could be considered goods. You're paying for a service.

        Subsistence is generally going to be a purchase of goods - usually food and drink costs - but these are explicitly excluded anyway.

        Comment


          Originally posted by riffpie View Post
          Travel and subsistence isn't a service.
          It's generally crap service, but unless you're keeping the train you travelled on then yes it is.

          Comment


            Originally posted by TheCyclingProgrammer View Post
            https://www.gov.uk/government/public...technical-note

            Only expenditure on goods counts, and capital expenditure and employee food and drink costs are excluded. IT equipment - yes if its not treated as capital expenditure, stationary yes but how much stationary does the average contract spend their money on? Accountancy is not a purchase of goods.



            Very unlikely I spend that much on *goods*. I do spend more than that on other things.



            More services.
            Certainly don't spend that much on stationary - however IT hardware & software, yes. Begs the question whether all IT purchases have to be treated as a capital expense...

            Comment


              Originally posted by barrydidit View Post
              It's generally crap service, but unless you're keeping the train you travelled on then yes it is.
              Fair enough. Edited.

              Comment


                Originally posted by MarkT View Post
                Certainly don't spend that much on stationary - however IT hardware & software, yes. Begs the question whether all IT purchases have to be treated as a capital expense...
                I generally treat hardware over a grand as a capital expense. I used to treat lower cost hardware (phones mainly) as capital expense but I don't anymore. I don't buy hardware that often though.

                I suppose if you want to be cynical about it, treating hardware purchases as non-capital expenses as a way of avoiding the new FRS rate may welcome unwanted attention from the VAT man though I don't know what criteria they would use for determining if something had been treated as an expense when it should have been capital

                Regarding software...if you're buying it and receiving it as a digital download it is treated as a service. Only old-fashioned off-the-shelf software on physical media counts as a good.

                Comment


                  Originally posted by TheCyclingProgrammer View Post
                  I generally treat hardware over a grand as a capital expense. I used to treat lower cost hardware (phones mainly) as capital expense but I don't anymore. I don't buy hardware that often though.

                  I suppose if you want to be cynical about it, treating hardware purchases as non-capital expenses as a way of avoiding the new FRS rate may welcome unwanted attention from the VAT man though I don't know what criteria they would use for determining if something had been treated as an expense when it should have been capital

                  Regarding software...if you're buying it and receiving it as a digital download it is treated as a service. Only old-fashioned off-the-shelf software on physical media counts as a good.
                  This is so backwards. Stupid world.

                  Comment


                    Originally posted by adubya View Post
                    Don't you ?
                    Depends where I'm working.
                    "You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by riffpie View Post
                      Accounts would be a service, although I'm unsure if they're excluded simply because the word "goods" is used. ...
                      If your accountant provides you with a hard-copy signed copy of your annual accounts, that should count as "goods" surely.

                      May sound absurd, but if that is how one must game the system so be it.
                      Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ here

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