I had several consecutive contracts in Central London with different companies, all within a 2 mile radius, in 5 years.
My accountant said no more travel expenses after 24 months as the distance between the clients was not far enough.
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Reply to: 24 mth rule - same distance travelled
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Previously on "24 mth rule - same distance travelled"
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Originally posted by WTFH View PostThing is, the OP refuses to say how far apart they are or how he is getting in to them. He has admitted it's the same company and that they are big.
Let's put it like this...
If the OP took a job in Newbury and for the first stint of his contract he drove along the A34 and parked in the head office car park and worked on the reception desk of the head office.
He then gets offered a job answering the phone on the helpdesk, located in the building beside reception. As part of the new job he is required to park in the contractors car park (not far from the A34) and take the free bus to the office.
The difference between the two car parks is 20 mins. There's a free bus, and he ends up in (give or take 50 metres) the same place.
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostThat's not the wording they use in the guidance....
And it particularly mentions...
OP uses exactly that wording when he said the following.. In fact he said it twice.
I base my approach on the following sticky. Though I haven't re-read it all to see if anything significant has changed in the rules since the sticky was stuck.
https://forums.contractoruk.com/acco...-nutshell.html
Only a mug would base their decision on whether to claim or not on the client's 'promise' of work without a contract to back it up. I don't expect them to be that accurate at project management or that likely to stick to their initial plans across multiple years, or that likely I'd stay around beyond month 23 if the rate wasn't uplifted to compensate for lack of expenses beyond that point.
It all may soon become moot anyway if the current public sector IR35 rules roll out to private sector and travel expenses are much harder to claim.Last edited by Hobosapien; 18 September 2018, 09:44.
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Originally posted by Old Greg View PostThis does not sound like a trivial difference. It is not two tube stop away. I would claim. Accountants can be risk adverse because they are looking after their interests if it all goes wrong.
Let's put it like this...
If the OP took a job in Newbury and for the first stint of his contract he drove along the A34 and parked in the head office car park and worked on the reception desk of the head office.
He then gets offered a job answering the phone on the helpdesk, located in the building beside reception. As part of the new job he is required to park in the contractors car park (not far from the A34) and take the free bus to the office.
The difference between the two car parks is 20 mins. There's a free bus, and he ends up in (give or take 50 metres) the same place.
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How many times has HMRC judged someone to have broken the 24 month rule when moving to a new contract in a nearby location?
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This does not sound like a trivial difference. It is not two tube stop away. I would claim. Accountants can be risk adverse because they are looking after their interests if it all goes wrong.
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostSo he can't claim the travel to his rented accomodation or food. From there to client could be possible? Probably peanuts so I wouldn't be claiming any of that.
That said there is no telling some people. I remember sitting on a train from London with two guys opposite me who started chatting and both turned out to be contractors. One of them drops it in he's been working in London nearly 4 years so in I go. Quiz him about his 24 month status. He looks me in the eye and tells me he's via a different agent with a different client 6 floors up so the clock reset. I nearly spat my coffee out. Showed him the thread on here and even the HMRC example about the client next door and he wasn't having any of it. The other guy went quiet and spent the rest of the journey reading on his phone so I've a feeling he's learnt some bad news as well but at least he looked bothered.
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Originally posted by oliverson View PostThat's a good read, thanks for the link.
Situation is Manchester -> Euston (I think) and tube to whatever site he's at then staying over at rented accommodation in the same place it's been for years. Finally at end of week, Euston -> Manchester. Probably sits in the same seat on the train each time.
That said there is no telling some people. I remember sitting on a train from London with two guys opposite me who started chatting and both turned out to be contractors. One of them drops it in he's been working in London nearly 4 years so in I go. Quiz him about his 24 month status. He looks me in the eye and tells me he's via a different agent with a different client 6 floors up so the clock reset. I nearly spat my coffee out. Showed him the thread on here and even the HMRC example about the client next door and he wasn't having any of it. The other guy went quiet and spent the rest of the journey reading on his phone so I've a feeling he's learnt some bad news as well but at least he looked bothered.Last edited by northernladuk; 17 September 2018, 15:54.
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Originally posted by northernladuk View Posthttps://forums.contractoruk.com/acco...le-london.html
Where does he stay?
To get an answer as to valid or not you are going to have to look at his situation in great detail, check guidance, assess your appetite to risk and then finally make a judgement call. It won't be one we all agree with I can guarantee that.
Situation is Manchester -> Euston (I think) and tube to whatever site he's at then staying over at rented accommodation in the same place it's been for years. Finally at end of week, Euston -> Manchester. Probably sits in the same seat on the train each time.
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Originally posted by oliverson View PostI suspect this has been asked before but say you live in Manchester and contract predominantly in London - Canary Wharf for 2 years then City for 2 years then Back to Canary Wharf for whatever. Doesn't affect me as I'm 60%+ from home but a mate of mine has been doing this for years on end now and hasn't stopped claiming significant travel and accommodation costs. To me it's valid. London is a big place but I'm suspecting the revenue probably won't see it that way.
Where does he stay?
To get an answer as to valid or not you are going to have to look at his situation in great detail, check guidance, assess your appetite to risk and then finally make a judgement call. It won't be one we all agree with I can guarantee that.Last edited by northernladuk; 17 September 2018, 15:22.
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I suspect this has been asked before but say you live in Manchester and contract predominantly in London - Canary Wharf for 2 years then City for 2 years then Back to Canary Wharf for whatever. Doesn't affect me as I'm 60%+ from home but a mate of mine has been doing this for years on end now and hasn't stopped claiming significant travel and accommodation costs. To me it's valid. London is a big place but I'm suspecting the revenue probably won't see it that way.
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Originally posted by Hobosapien View PostThe rule is clear in that you must stop claiming travel related expenses from the point you know the contract will go over 24 months. You can only know that for a fact when you have the contract or extension agreed and signed that takes you over 24 months.
Everything else, including the IR35 bogeyman or accuracy of a project plan, is irrelevant. Work to the rules as you know them applying at that moment in time not what may (however unlikely) happen in the future.
And it particularly mentions...
The legislation is written in terms of the length of time that it is reasonable to assume, or is likely, that the employee will spend at that workplace. The effect of the rule is not altered where the expectation does not match the outcome
it's likely going to be a 3 yr programme, so likely extended.Last edited by northernladuk; 17 September 2018, 14:52.
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The rule is clear in that you must stop claiming travel related expenses from the point you know the contract will go over 24 months. You can only know that for a fact when you have the contract or extension agreed and signed that takes you over 24 months.
Everything else, including the IR35 bogeyman or accuracy of a project plan, is irrelevant. Work to the rules as you know them applying at that moment in time not what may (however unlikely) happen in the future.
I'm sure I'm not the only one that has claimed up to month 23 then renewed beyond month 24 with no further claiming and had no come back from accountant or HMRC. The rules are the rules.
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Don't get me wrong, if your contract doesn't breach the 24 months, you've got a pretty good argument on your side, especially if the client has never put anything in writing talking about time past that. And I'd say it is probably ironclad if you don't go past 24 months, you can always say that whatever the client wanted I never intended to stay that long.
But if you do stay longer, and you knew from the beginning the project was a long one, there's no guarantee HMRC won't go after it, and the benefit of the doubt only goes one way with HMRC.
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Originally posted by Hobosapien View PostThe only paper trail that is relevant is the contract agreed and signed.
Originally posted by Hobosapien View PostFor expenses HMRC will only look at the agreed contract if they investigate, they won't be asking the client for related project documents and gantt charts unless it's part of a much wider investigation of some sort that defies normal logic.
Originally posted by Hobosapien View PostIf the client wanted the contractor for the length of the project they would make that clear at the start and offer a contract for the anticipated length of the project.
And all an inspector has to do is ask the client if the contractor knew at the beginning that he was going to be there 3 years, and the client to say the wrong thing, and there's a problem.
But surely the inspector would never ask and the client would never say the wrong thing, so carry on.
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