Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Marriage Allowance

Wednesday, March 8th, 2017

Although the financial impact of this allowance is relatively low, it is surprising that there has not been more uptake of the Marriage Allowance since its inception 6 April 2015. In fact, taxpayers that qualify can still backdate a claim for 2015-16 as well as make a claim for the current tax year, 2016-17.

Marriage Allowance lets you transfer £1,100 of your Personal Allowance to your husband, wife or civil partner – if they earn more than you. This reduces their tax by up to £220 in the tax year. To benefit as a couple, the lower earner must have an income of £11,000 or less.

If you were eligible for Marriage Allowance in the 2015-2016 tax year, you can backdate your claim to 6 April 2015 and reduce the tax paid by up to £432.

Who can apply

You can get Marriage Allowance if all the following apply:

  • you are married or in a civil partnership
  • you don’t earn anything or your income is under £11,000
  • your partner’s income is between £11,001 and £43,000

You can still apply for Marriage Allowance if you or your partner:

  • are currently receiving a pension
  • live abroad – as long as you get a Personal Allowance.

 

To apply, you will need you and your partner’s National Insurance numbers. You will also need a way to prove your identity. This can be one of the following:

  • the last 4 digits of the account that your child benefit, tax credits or pension is paid into
  • the last 4 digits of an account that pays you interest
  • details from your P60
  • details from any of your 3 most recent payslips
  • your passport number and expiry date

You’ll get an email confirming your application. The online application link is https://www.tax.service.gov.uk/marriage-allowance-application/eligibility-check?_ga=1.166134333.262204862.1487688115

The budget crystal ball

Wednesday, March 8th, 2017

Today Philip Hammond will present his first budget to parliament; forecasting any changes he may be considering to the UK tax system is perhaps unwise.

If he remains committed to austerity, anticipating any potential fall-out from the Brexit process and maintaining (or more likely slowing down) the repayment of national debt, it is difficult to see where savings can come from to fund tax give-aways.

Most of the annual tax allowances for 2017-18 have already been published so what we may see are commitments to ease taxation in future years. There have been rumours that the UK may be promoted as a low-tax area to draw non-EU business to the UK after Brexit. Perhaps we will see a promise to reduce corporation tax below 17%, the rate it is predicted to be from April 2020, or bring forward the reduction to 17%.

Other predictions include:

  • Increasing stamp duty thresholds for first-time buyers.
  • Setting a fixed rate for pensions tax relief – 33 per cent has been mooted.
  • Taking the sting out of the recently announced business rate increases.
  • Efforts to simplify tax compliance for businesses.

Additionally, we may see a start towards the alignment of rules for NIC and income tax, removing or closing the disparity between the overall tax and NIC payable by the self-employed and employed persons.

In some respects, tax payers, their advisors and HMRC have their hands full implementing tax changes already announced. Most impactful is Making Tax Digital and the necessity for the self-employed to make quarterly data uploads from April 2018.

Many of us are hoping that Mr Hammond will opt for a gently-gently approach. By this time next week, we will know if he agrees.

Making Tax Digital

Wednesday, March 1st, 2017

We have now seen the response of HMRC to representations made by accountants and other interested parties to their Making Tax Digital (MTD) agenda.

A reminder that MTD will result in the gradual digitisation of small business (including landlords) reporting to HMRC. The present proposals will oblige smaller businesses to upload quarterly data to HMRC from April 2018.

HMRC’s response included a number of relaxations, primarily:

  • Confirmation that data can be uploaded from spreadsheets, and
  • Free software will be made available for smaller concerns.

Unfortunately, HMRC has not changed their approach to other key issues. For example:

  • They have not moved from their original intention to exempt small businesses whose taxable income is lower than £10,000. Representations made suggested that this limit was far too low and would place an unfair compliance cost on micro business owners who may not even be tax payers. There are rumours that HMRC is under pressure from parliamentary committees to lift this limit to at least the VAT registration threshold, currently £83,000. This is one of the “hot topics” that we expect to be resolved in the Chancellor’s announcements next week.
  • HMRC still intends to start MTD upload requirements from April 2018. Although this is still a year ahead, the changes required to accounting software, and presumably HMRC’s computer systems, are formidable. There is pressure on government to ease back their implementation timetable, and perhaps consider a voluntary trial of MTD for a period, in parallel with the existing Self Assessment processes. This would provide some comfort that the intended outcomes are achievable.

MTD will eventually replace Self Assessment. In principle, pushing the majority of the data that is required to calculate tax liability into an individual’s personal tax account with HMRC is probably more efficient than the present Self Assessment regime where data is sent to HMRC by the tax payer and then checked against data uploaded by third parties, banks and employers for example.

All eyes will be turned towards the fine print published on this issue next week. Let’s hope common sense prevails.

Personal tax and National Insurance changes for 2017-18

Wednesday, March 1st, 2017

In no particular order changes already announced include:

  • The personal tax allowance will increase to £11,500 and the higher rate threshold will rise to £45,000.
  • The annual ISA limit will increase to £20,000.
  • Both employers and employees will start paying NICs on weekly earnings above £157.
  • The government will legislate for a new Income Tax exemption and NICs disregard to cover the first £500 worth of pension advice provided to an employee in a tax year. It will allow advice on both pensions and general financial and tax issues relating to pensions.
  • The government will legislate in Finance Bill 2017 to set out a detailed method for calculating the taxable value (cash equivalent) of an asset provided to the employee which is made available for private use. This means that employees will just pay tax for those days on which the asset is available for private use. This will provide clarity for both employees and employers.
  • As announced at Autumn Statement 2016, the government will legislate in Finance Bill 2017 to 2018 to extend the existing IHT exemption for donations to political parties to include donations made to qualifying political parties in the devolved legislatures and parties that have acquired representatives through by-elections. These changes will modernise the IHT exemption and reflect changes to the political landscape in which political parties operate.
  • Legislation will be introduced in Finance Bill 2017 to create 2 new allowances for individuals of £1,000 each, 1 for trading and 1 for property income. The trading allowance will also apply to certain miscellaneous income from providing assets or services.

No doubt there will be further changes announced next week.

Buy to let property owners – time to start planning for tax changes

Wednesday, March 1st, 2017

Property business owners, particularly buy-to-let landlords, have been hit with a number of quite dramatic changes in their tax status. One of the most draconian is the gradual disallowance of tax relief for finance payments that starts April 2017.

 

We have highlighted this issue in past articles posted to this newsletter. In essence, from April 2017, finance charges will be progressively disallowed and replaced with a tax credit fixed at 20% of the cumulative charges disallowed.

 

The changes will have the most impact on landlords who have borrowed heavily to grow their property portfolio. Landlords affected will suffer a possible two-fold, and negative impact on their property business.

 

Firstly, if their present claims for mortgage interest and other finance charges are reducing the amount of higher rate tax they are required to pay, once the present changes are fully implemented by 2020, tax bills will increase as tax relief will be limited to the basic rate.

 

Secondly, if their present claims for mortgage interest and other finance charges are reducing their taxable property income, such that they pay no higher rate tax, when these charges are disallowed their taxable income will increase – possibly into the higher rate bands – and for the first time they may become higher rate tax payers. They will still get some relief for finance charges paid but only at the basic rate.

 

In both cases, the amount of cash generated, after tax, will reduce. If landlord’s occupancy rates fall, the loss of cash flow will be exaggerated by increased tax bills and investors may face tough choices.

 

Planning is absolutely key. If you feel you may be affected, and have not taken professional advice thus far, please call. We would be delighted to both quantify the effects on your property business cash flow and to offer strategic ideas to minimise the downside consequences.

The UK is to get its first Small Business Commissioner

Wednesday, March 1st, 2017

A search is underway to recruit the UK’s first Small Business Commissioner.

The commissioner will be a high profile role supporting small businesses in payment disputes with their larger customers.

  • The Commissioner appointment is an important measure in tackling late payment issues
  • Expected to be based in Birmingham, the Commissioner will be a national champion for small businesses.

Comments from government sources include:

Small Business Minister Margot James said:

We all rely on the UK’s 5.5 million small and medium sized businesses for jobs, goods and services, and an unfair payment culture that hurts these firms has no place in an economy that works for all. This is why we are looking for an exceptional individual to help smaller firms resolve payment disputes and champion a culture change in how businesses work together.

Addressing the barriers businesses face when scaling up and growing is an important part of a modern Industrial Strategy, and this appointment will play an integral role in ensuring small businesses have the support they need to thrive and grow.

Mike Cherry, National Chairman at the Federation of Small Businesses, said:

I am delighted to be invited by the Secretary of State to be part of the selection process for the Small Business Commissioner. There is simply no excuse for a business culture where supply chain bullying or poor payment practice are acceptable. FSB research shows that poor payment practice is on the rise, causing 50,000 business deaths each year.

Small firms need a Commissioner who will make a meaningful difference to the £26bn currently stuck in bank accounts as payments outstanding to SMEs. He or she must be given the powers and resources to tackle this, to step in to save small firms whose livelihoods are under threat, and to promote a prompt payment culture right across the economy.

The Small Business Commissioner, expected to be based in Birmingham, is just one part of a package of measures designed to tackle this and drive a real change in the UK’s payment culture. Regulations coming into force in April 2017 will require big businesses to publically report on the time taken to pay their suppliers, and guidance to help large businesses comply with these changes was published last month. This will shine a light on poor payment practices and allow suppliers, including small businesses, to make informed decisions about who they do business with.

Who knows, perhaps this will result in a reduction in payment delays by larger companies to cash-vulnerable smaller concerns in the supply line. Fingers crossed.

Tax Diary March/April 2017

Wednesday, March 1st, 2017

1 March 2017 – Due date for Corporation Tax due for the year ended 31 May 2016.

2 March 2017 – Self Assessment tax for 2015/16 paid after this date will incur a 5% surcharge.

19 March 2017 – PAYE and NIC deductions due for month ended 5 March 2017. (If you pay your tax electronically the due date is 22 March 2017.)

19 March 2017 – Filing deadline for the CIS300 monthly return for the month ended 5 March 2017.

19 March 2017 – CIS tax deducted for the month ended 5 March 2017 is payable by today.

1 April 2017 – Due date for Corporation Tax due for the year ended 30 June 2016.

19 April 2017 – PAYE and NIC deductions due for month ended 5 April 2017. (If you pay your tax electronically the due date is 22 April 2017.)

19 April 2017 – Filing deadline for the CIS300 monthly return for the month ended 5 April 2017.

19 April 2017 – CIS tax deducted for the month ended 5 April 2017 is payable by today.

Tax free pensions advice

Tuesday, February 28th, 2017

People planning their retirement will be able to withdraw up to £1,500 from their pension pots tax-free to pay for financial advice, under recent plans unveiled by the government.

 

The new Pension Advice Allowance, first announced at Autumn Statement 2016, will enable people to withdraw £500 up to three occasions from their pension pots tax-free to put towards the cost of pensions and retirement advice from April 2017.

 

Following an 8-week consultation, the Economic Secretary to the Treasury, Simon Kirby, has today confirmed that the £500 allowance:

  • can be used a total of three times, only once in a tax year, allowing people to access retirement advice at different stages of their lives, for example when first choosing pension or just prior to retirement
  • will be available at any age, allowing people of all ages to engage with retirement planning
  • can be redeemed against the cost of regulated financial advice, including ‘robo advice’ as well as traditional face-to-face advice
  • will be available to holders of “defined contribution” pensions and hybrid pensions with a defined contribution element, not “defined benefit” or final salary type schemes

 

Pension providers will be able to offer the allowance to their members from April 2017.

 

Research has found that when approaching retirement only 22% of people know the value of their pension pot and only 14% of people would be confident planning their retirement goals without financial advice.

 

According to Unbiased, UK savers with a pension pot of £100,000 save an average of £98 more every month and receive an additional income of £3,654 every year of their retirement if they take financial advice.

Buy-to-let and the changing tax landscape

Monday, February 27th, 2017

Buy-to-let property owners have been singled out in recent budgets for some quite draconian tax changes.

One of the most pervasive starts 6 April 2017. From this date, tax relief for the cost of borrowing – predominately interest charges – will be progressively withdrawn and replaced with a basic rate tax credit.

Between now and the 6 April 2020 relief will be tapered as follows:

 

2017-18

The deduction of allowable finance costs will be restricted to 75%, with 25% being available as a basic rate income tax deduction.

2018-19

The deduction of allowable finance costs will be restricted to 50%, with 50% being available as a basic rate income tax deduction.

2019-20

The deduction of allowable finance costs will be restricted to 25%, with 75% being available as a basic rate income tax deduction.

 

A worked example: consider the case of Linda, who has a buy to let with an annual mortgage interest charge of £10,000. Up to April 2017 she will be able to deduct the full amount, £10,000, from her property income before she pays tax. Obviously, the higher her rate of income tax the more tax relief she will currently receive.

 

The table below sets out the effective loss of tax relief if Linda is a higher rate or additional rate taxpayer. If Linda only pays tax at the basic rate there is no change in her income tax position.

 

 

2016-17

2017-18

2018-19

2019-20

2020-21

Finance cost allowed

10,000

7,500

5,000

2,500

0

If additional rate taxpayer:

Additional rate 45% relief

4,500

3,375

2,250

1,125

0

Basic rate deduction

0

500

1,000

1,500

2,000

Total tax relief

4,500

3,875

3,250

2,625

2,000

Net finance costs paid

5,500

6,125

6,750

7,375

8,000

If higher rate taxpayer:

Additional rate 40% relief

4,000

3,000

2,000

1,000

0

Basic rate deduction

0

500

1,000

1,500

2,000

Total tax relief

4,000

3,500

3,000

2,500

2,000

Net finance costs paid

6,000

6,500

7,000

7,500

8,000

 

Because the amount of tax relief is gradually reduced, from April 2017 to April 2020, the cash flow impact is progressively negative for higher rate or additional rate tax payers. In our example, if Linda is a higher rate taxpayer her net finance costs (after deduction of tax relief) increase from £6,000 in 2016-17, to £8,000 in 2020-21.

A further consequence of this change is that the rental income for tax purposes increases with no increase in rents: the finance costs are added back. In some circumstances this may mean that basic rate taxpayers become higher rate tax payers.

Buy-to-let property owners who have not yet considered how this change will affect their property business should set aside some time with their advisors as soon as possible. We would be delighted to help.

Lifetime ISAs

Monday, February 20th, 2017

A reminder that from 6 April 2017 Lifetime ISAs are available as an alternative tax-free investment.

The lifetime Individual Savings Account (ISA) is a longer term tax-free account that receives a government bonus.

Details published 17 February 2017 are:

You can open a lifetime ISA if you are aged 18 or over but under 40. You must be either:

  • resident in the UK
  • a Crown Servant (for example a diplomat or civil servant)
  • the spouse or civil partner of a Crown Servant

As with other ISAs, you won’t pay tax on any interest, income or capital gains from cash or investments held within your lifetime ISA.

Saving in a lifetime ISA

You can save up to £4,000 each year in a lifetime ISA. There is no maximum monthly savings contribution, and you can continue to save in it until you reach 50. The account can stay open after then but you can’t make any more payments into it.

The £4,000 limit, if used, will form part of your overall annual ISA limit. From the tax year 2017 to 2018, the overall annual tax limit will be £20,000.

For example, you could save:

  • £11,000 in a cash ISA
  • £2,000 in a stocks and shares ISA
  • £3,000 in an innovative finance ISA
  • £4,000 in a lifetime ISA in one tax year

Your lifetime ISA won’t close when the tax year finishes. You’ll keep your savings on a tax-free basis for as long as you keep the money in your lifetime ISA.

Lifetime ISAs can hold cash, stocks and shares qualifying investments, or a combination of both.

Government bonus

When you save into your lifetime ISA, you will receive a government bonus of 25% of the money you put in, up to a maximum of £1,000 a year.

Withdrawals

You can withdraw the funds held in your lifetime ISA before you’re 60, but you’ll have to pay a withdrawal charge of 25% of the amount you withdraw.

A withdrawal charge will not apply if you are:

  • using it towards a first home
  • aged 60
  • terminally ill with less than 12 months to live

If you die, your lifetime ISA will end on the date of your death and there won’t be a withdrawal charge for withdrawing funds or assets from your account.

Transferring a lifetime ISA

You can transfer your lifetime ISA to another lifetime ISA with a different provider without incurring a withdrawal charge. If you transfer it to a different type of ISA, you will have to pay a withdrawal charge.

Saving for your first home

Your lifetime ISA savings and the bonus can be used towards buying your first home, worth up to £450,000, without incurring a withdrawal charge. You must be buying your home with a mortgage.

You must use a conveyancer or solicitor to act for you in the purchase, and the funds must be paid direct to them by your lifetime ISA provider.

If you are buying with another first time buyer, and you each have a lifetime ISA, you can both use your government bonus. You can also buy a house with someone who isn’t a first time buyer but they will not be able to use their lifetime ISA without incurring a withdrawal charge.

Your lifetime ISA must have been opened for at least 12 months before you can withdraw funds from it to buy your first home.

If you have a Help to Buy ISA, you can transfer those savings into your lifetime ISA or you can continue to save into both – but you will only be able to use the government bonus from one to buy your first home.