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Home > General (L494) > Tax question on financing a new RRS |
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crammy Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: essex Posts: 167 |
http://cccfcalculator.hmrc.gov.uk/CCF0.aspx
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Fri Oct 09 2015 9:41am |
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wilf Member Since: 08 Nov 2012 Location: on the naughty step Posts: 939 |
Just taken the same decision - and running it as a personal vehicle came out trumps.
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Fri Oct 09 2015 9:56am |
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myfirstrrs Member Since: 20 Jan 2014 Location: Lancashire Posts: 433 |
At first glance it looks great to get your company to buy and run the vehicle as a company expense but it ruins your personal allowance for your personal tax that it seems to always cost you a lot more overall. It probably requires more detailed analysis and all factors to be considered though to really understand the figures.
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Fri Oct 09 2015 10:21am |
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forest172 Member Since: 03 Apr 2013 Location: Derbyshire Posts: 104 |
Same boat here
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Fri Oct 09 2015 11:25am |
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bluestone Member Since: 11 Aug 2015 Location: Manchester Posts: 155 |
I have just check the parkers company car tax calculator, which for this vehicle is around £4200 as a basic rate tax payer.
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Fri Oct 09 2015 11:57am |
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forest172 Member Since: 03 Apr 2013 Location: Derbyshire Posts: 104 |
It`s seen as a £23,500 BIK so if you just sit under the 40% rate. Which most directors do, then add this over and above which would take it to approx a £9,000 tax bill
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Fri Oct 09 2015 12:02pm |
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wilf Member Since: 08 Nov 2012 Location: on the naughty step Posts: 939 |
The other problem is that the significant BIK figure adds to your "total taxable pay" figure and that can take you into very high marginal tax rates where your personal allowance is confiscated. MY2016 HSE D SDV6 - gone due to fuel dilution problems.
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Fri Oct 09 2015 7:32pm |
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drdelrrs Member Since: 02 Nov 2010 Location: UK Posts: 1163 |
Stick as you are, massive record keeping with 'company' owned cars. I've done it this way for 20years and believe I checked most option.
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Fri Oct 09 2015 9:12pm |
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mikef Member Since: 16 Sep 2013 Location: bucks Posts: 313 |
Find a good tax accountant. Then ask him about the possibility of running your business as a LLP company rather than a LTD company. A LLP company will allow you to buy your vehicles through the business without paying BIK. Its actually more tax efficient to contract hire them because you can write off 100% of the contract hire payments and 50% of the VAT on them against taxable profits. There are other benefits of running your business as a LLP as well which I won't bore you with here |
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Sat Oct 10 2015 10:29pm |
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bluestone Member Since: 11 Aug 2015 Location: Manchester Posts: 155 |
Mike. I would love to hear more as I'm sure others would as well. MY16 (65) RRS, HSE, White, 21" 507s, Pan/Black Roof, 7 Seats, Ebony/Cirrus, Surround Cams, Fully Color Coded |
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Sat Oct 10 2015 11:01pm |
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mikef Member Since: 16 Sep 2013 Location: bucks Posts: 313 |
bluestone, first I am not a tax accountant just a business owner. Some years ago we were advised that there were tax benefits in our case to move our business activities from our previous LTD company structure into a new LLP structure. One of those advantages is BIK on company vehicles. This was all entirely legal and accepted by HMRC. I can't stress enough that anyone contemplating this should take the advice of a good tax accountant who is familiar with llp structures
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Sun Oct 11 2015 4:30pm |
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