Originally posted by cwah
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However, they will likely have an issue with your market value. As anyone that has built a pc knows, the sum of parts does not equal the market value of the whole, so your market value methodology will be challenged. Further, HMRC's own guidance is that after one year the market value of a bicycle is only 25% of original value. Now you may have an argument that as yours are electric then a different percentage should apply, but you're raising red flags for additional queries in your accounts.
Your maths also seems a bit off. At the moment you're claiming 20p per mile. You won't be able to claim that if the business owns the bicycles, but you state there's £400 in repairs per year. The first challenge from HMRC will be whether all of that £400 is for the business bikes, which will open you up to an investigation into your personal affairs for them to verify the comparison of personal expenditure vs business expenditure on repairs. You do have additional repair expenditure on your personal bicycles, don't you? They'll also examine why you have £400 across both bikes when they are only being ridden half the time each for business. The second part is whether your loss of 20p per mile is offset by any repair costs. As a rough calculation, £400/0.20/220 billing days = a bit over 9 miles round trip, if your commute is more than this then you're losing out.
You also need to be realistic about whether you would go for immediate shipping when it's clear that you have 3 other bicycles available at your disposal. While HMRC won't care if you waste money on fast shipping when you clearly have another means of transport (you can waste your own money however you like), they will care about the deductibility so you can bet that you will need to be very explicit in verifying that this fast shipping is 100% for business repairs and does not include spare parts for personal bicycles. You will also need to be certain that these are repairs (seriously, if it's costing you this much per bike every year then get a better warranty) or are capital improvements that should be depreciated.
No idea what you're valuing £200 in "major incident" as. Is this an actual cost?
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