UK Tax News

Furlough and SEISS extension

 

Written by Ray Coman

 

Furlough-extensionAnnounced yesterday, the Chancellor has extended self-employment income support scheme (SEISS) and furlough of employees until October.  The extension, according to Mr Sunak, makes the UK government covid response “amongst the most generous in the world.”

 

SEISS

Furlough extension

 

SEISS

 

The initial SEISS covered self-employment for the three months to 30 June.  Applications for this grant will remain open until 13 July 2020.  Further information can be found in the summary on Self-Employed Income Support Scheme.  By way of recap the grant is 80% of three months’ profits, subject to a limit of £2,500 a month.

 

As second grant will be available from August in which self-employed individuals will be able to claim 70% of profit for an average three months.  The payment will be subject to a monthly limit of £2,250.  This equates to an overall limit of £6,750 for the three month period.

 

Furlough extension

 

Employers are able to obtain support for the cost of paying their staff who are not able to work because of the enforced lockdown conditions.  However, the government plan will relax the lockdown in stages and alongside those measures taper grants.  Currently, employers can reclaim 80% of the salary of any employees who have not been able to work due to Covid.  The reimbursement is capped at £2,500 a month; however, the state will also fund employers NIC and pension obligations related to furloughed pay.

 

That coronavirus job retention scheme will continue in June and July 2020.  It is hoped that with continued falls in the rate of infection more will return to work and in tandem the number furloughed will decline.

 

From August, the government will no longer cover employers’ NIC and nor help towards paying for occupational pensions.

 

In September, the government will help towards only 70% of the pay for furloughed employees and will reduce the cap to £2,187.50.  Employers will be expected to pay the additional 10% of salary.

 

From October, an employer of a furloughed staff member will only receive compensation of 60% of their pay.  The reimbursement amount is to be capped at £1,875.  Until 1 September any top up of pay beyond the government reimbursement is voluntary.  In September and October, the 10% and 20% payments will be a statutory requirement.

Self-Employed Income Support Scheme

 

Written by Ray Coman

 

Self Employed Income Support SchemeAn announcement made today on 26th March aims to bring the support available to the self-employed in line with that already available to employees via the Coronavirus job retention scheme.

 

Grant calculation

Income criteria

Trading criteria

Payment date

Application process

Alternative finance

Working through a limited company

Is SEISS a taxable supply for VAT purposes?

 

Grant calculation

 

A self-employed person can obtain a grant equal to the lower of 80% of net monthly income and £2,500.  Net monthly profits are based on an average of profits for the preceding three tax years.

 

Income criteria

 

Only sole traders or partners with profits below a set limit will be eligible.  The limit is:

 

  • Either a profit of £50,000 or lower for the tax year of 2018-19; or
  • An average profit of £50,000 for the tax years 2018-19, 2017-18 and 2017-16.

 

Therefore, if 2018-19 resulted in a profit spike, eligibility could still be intact by reference to earlier years.  Where self-employment started after 6 April 2016, only the tax years of self-employment would be included in the averaging calculation.  Over 50% of income must be derived from self-employment activity.

 

Trading criteria

 

Unfortunately, sole traders who have registered in 2019-20 will not be eligible.  Sole traders still need to be in business for 2019-20, (or still in business were it not for Covid19), and with the intention to continue trading during 2020-21.  A sole trader must submit a 2018-19 Tax Return by 23 April 2020 in order to protect eligibility.

 

Payment date

 

The grants will be paid from 1 March 2020 to 31 May 2020.  HMRC intends grants to be payable in one lump sum from about June.

 

Application process

 

The facility for making an application is not yet available through the website.  There is no requirement to contact HMRC at this stage.  HMRC will contact taxpayers already registered as self-employed in due course.  Applications will be via online form.

 

Alternative finance

 

Until such a time as the grants are available, self-employed can access cash via Universal Credit and the Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan Scheme.

 

Working through a limited company

 

Sole directors can obtain the grant for Coronavirus job retention scheme if a payroll has been operated.

 

Is SEISS a taxable supply for VAT purposes?

 

It is not obvious from the HMRC guidance that the VAT position has been laid out in this case.  However, the more general guidance on grants is that these are not a taxable supply for VAT purposes if no consideration is received in return.  Our view is that SEISS receipt are not taxable income for a VAT registered trader and do not count towards the turnover test for VAT registration purposes.

Covid19

 

Written by Ray Coman

 

Covid19The coronavirus is spreading in the UK and across the globe, causing illness and death.  Yesterday, and for an unspecified amount of time, schools, universities, restaurants and other public meeting venues closed.  To encourage business owners to stick to the official guidelines and to mitigate the economic impact, a raft of emergency measures were announced on 20th March 2020.

 

Coronavirus job retention scheme

Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan Scheme

Statutory Sick Pay

Self-employed universal credit

Deferral of payments on account

Time to Pay arrangements

VAT deferral

IR35 postponement

Business rates

Retail and Hospitality Grant Scheme

Residency, domicile and remittance

Self-Employed Income Support Scheme

 

Coronavirus job retention scheme

 

The government has pledged to pay UK businesses suffering due to employees unable to work on account of Covid19.  The aim is to encourage employers to retain staff to prevent largescale disruption to employment.

 

A grant will be available to cover 80% of gross pay per ‘furloughed’ employee, up to a maximum of £2,500 per month. Gross pay for this definition includes employers' NIC and the statutory minimum of pension contributions.  

 

Pay going back to 1 March 2020 will be covered by the scheme.  The payment scheme will initially run to 31 May 2020.  The reference period for determining gross pay will be the month eneded 28th February 2020.  This is to prevent artifical increase of wages post announcement, for the prupose of increasing grant entitlement.  Full pay should be made via payroll and would be subject to PAYE tax, NIC and pension contribution liability for both employee and employer.

 

Affected workers are designated as “furloughed”.  This means that they cannot work for the employer but are, nonetheless, retained on payroll.  The employer needs to inform the employee in writing that they have been furloughed.

 

The grant will be applied for via an online portal on the HMRC website.  However, at the time of writing (21st March 2020), the application facility has not been made available.  HMRC have announced that they aim to have a submission system available by the end of April.  With the measures so new, payroll software providers are yet to release updates to accommodate the required ‘furloughed worker’ adjustments.

 

The sole director of a company can be a furloughed employee.  However, a furloughed employee cannot work and therefore the company of the contractor could not have any income during the period of the claim.  Inconsistency of work is in the nature of self-employment, and therefore a claim for salary support would be inconsistent with a basis for the company to be taxed outside of IR35.  Where lack of work is prolonged, the alternative of becoming a sole trader and relying on the benefits available in that scenario are more tenable.  SSP reclaims would apply in some cases to directors out of work due to illness.

 

Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan Scheme

 

 

For the week commencing 23rd March 2020, new loan types will be available to cover business interruption.  Participating lenders will be able to provide loans which are guaranteed by the government.  For the first 12 months, interest will be paid for by the government rather than by the borrower.  With no interest to pay, the tax effect would be neutral.  The scheme will be facilitated by mainstream lenders.

 

Certain organisations, such as households providing domestic staff and membership organisations will not be eligible.

 

Statutory Sick Pay

 

It has not been possible to reclaim Statutory Sick Pay (SSP) since 2013-14.  However, the government has announced that it will reimburse employers SSP for up to 2 weeks where the employee’s absence was caused by SSP.  Affcted workers would obtain an 'isolation note' from HMRC.  The mechanism for government repayments has not yet been set up on the HMRC website.

 

Self-employed universal credit

 

Self-employed workers who must stay at home because of Covid19 symptoms would not be eligible for SSP.  In this case, a self-employed worker can claim Universal Credit, up to the rate of statutory sick pay and without having to visit the JobCentre.  The chancellor also announced a general increase in universal credit allowance by £1,000 lasting twelve months.

 

Deferral of payments on account

 

Payments on account due by 31 July 2020 can now be deferred until 31 January 2021.  No late payment interest applies to 2019-20 second payments on account during the deferral period.  This will provide cash flow relief to individuals under self-assessment.  The new payment date applies automatically with no need to notify HMRC.

 

Time to Pay arrangements

 

HMRC Time to Pay arrangements will remain in place.  A taxpayer struggling to find the cash to settle a liability can contact HMRC directly.  An arrangement would spread the tax payments beyond the due date and without suffering late payment penalties that would otherwise apply.

 

VAT deferral

 

VAT payments normally due in a deferral period can now be postponed.  The deferral period is from 20 March to 30 June 2020.  Traders will have until 31 December 2020 to settle VAT liability otherwise payable in the deferral period.  The deferral applies automatically and does not need to be applied for.  The mechanism by which the payments will be collected has not yet been made clear.  Any VAT refunds would be processed in the usual timeframes.

 

IR35 postponement

 

The IR35 rules tax place a PAYE requirement on an individual who would be an employee ‘but for’ a company.  The rules are an anti-avoidance provision designed to stop employees forming companies simply to avoid national insurance.  A new ruling was designed to make it the responsibility of the person hiring to assess whether an individual was employed or self-employed.  This new ruling was due to come into force on 1 April 2020.  However, the ruling could also have the effect of deterring business from expanding operations with contractors.  As a result of the impact of Covid19 on the economy, the new ruling will not come into effect until 1 April 2021.

 

Business rates

 

A business rates holiday for 2020-21 will apply for those worse effected in the sector leisure, retail and hospitality sectors.  Businesses do need to make an application. The rates relief is automatically applied.

 

Retail and Hospitality Grant Scheme

 

The scheme provides support of up to £10,000 for affected businesses.

 

Residency, domicile and remittance

 

Days in which an individual is required to stay in the UK as a result of 'lockdown' measures will be treated as exception for the purpose of determining tax residence.

 

Self-Employed Income Support Scheme

 

The Self-Employed Income Support Scheme was introduced three days after the initial package of support.  It is detailed on a separate page found through the link above.

2020 Budget

 

Written by Ray Coman

 

2020 BudgetWith a new government, now comfortable in its majority, new Chancellor, an outgoing Bank of England governor and its first since leaving the EU, the 2020 Budget was bound for the limelight. Rishi Sunak, boasted the largest fiscal boost for 30 years with substantial allocations for infrastructure, roads, housing and education. It was billed as a plan for prosperity.

 

Pension allowance threshold increase

Entrepreneur's relief

Lower tax for certain gains on life insurance products

Structures and buildings allowance to increase

National insurance threshold to rise

Employment allowance up by £1,000

Notable exceptions

Research and development credit rises

Non-resident companies owning property

Corporation tax unchanged

Capital gains tax

Restriction on use of carry forward losses for large companies

Other measures

Summary

 

Pension allowance threshold increase

 

The pension allowance is the annual amount that a taxpayer can invest in a pension and obtain tax relief.  It is currently £40,000.  However once net adjusted income exceeds a threshold, the allowance reduces from £40,000 to a minimum amount.  The amount of the reduction is £1 for every £2 that income exceeds the annual allowance.  The threshold is currently £150,000 for net adjusted income.  Net adjusted income is income plus employers’ pension contribution.  The threshold for income (i.e. after deduction of employer’s pension contribution) is currently £100,000.  More information can be found in the guidance on pension allowance.

 

Both thresholds are due to increase by £90,000.  The adjusted income threshold will increase to £240,000 from 6 April 2020.  The floor has been lowered from £10,000 to £4,000.  The amount below which the allowance cannot be tapered has reduced to £4,000.  The difference between the £40,000 maximum and £4,000 minimum is £36,000.  Applying the £2 for every £1 formula, tapering will stop at £240,000 plus (£36,000 x 2) or £312,000.

 

The allowance effects 2020-21 and future years only.  Tapering of allowance in previous years will be subject to the old rates for pension allowance of £150,000 adjusted income and £10,000 minimum threshold.  In his speech, the chancellor spoke about the increase in the allowance as a measure that would help health professionals.  He explained that 98% or consultants and 96% of GPs would no longer have pension allowance tapered.  On account of above average income, the measure will help medical professionals, but the reform is applicable to all higher income taxpayers.

 

Entrepreneur’s relief

 

This concession applies to gains made by business owners and more detail can be found in the rates table for capital gains.  Broadly, the relief allows business owners to dispose of their interests and suffer tax on any gain at a flat rate of 10%.  The rate otherwise applicable to gains is 20% to the extent that an individual is a higher rate taxpayer.  The rate is even higher for gains on disposal of residential property that is not the owner’s home.  The more generous rate applies only to gain made below an annual lifetime limit.  This limit was previously set at £10 million.  From 2020-21 the lifetime limit is reduced to £1 million.

 

The limit was £1million when entrepreneur’s relief was first introduced.  The lifetime limit is therefore returning to its 2008-09 threshold when the relief was brought in (to replaced business asset taper relief.)  It is not expected to impact many individuals.  An owner must have at least a 5% stake in the investment and the average shareholder will remain unaffected by the cut.  Most proprietary businesses will not be disposed of for over £1 million.

 

The lifetime limit also applies to shares in Enterprise Management Incentives.  The new measure takes effect from today, 11 March 2020.  Gains above the threshold will be subject to the higher rate capital gains tax that applies to disposals of shares and business assets of 20%.

 

Lower tax for certain gains on life insurance products

 

Gains made on certain life insurance products are subject to income tax.  The way that tax is calculated on these gains is referred to as top-slicing.  The calculation of top slicing relief has changed so that personal allowance is reinstated in the calculation.  Personal allowance is abated for individuals earning over £100,000 and foregone by non-domiciled individuals claiming the remittance basis.  The new calculation applies to any gains made with effect from today, i.e., 11 March.

 

Structures and buildings allowance to increase

 

Construction work on buildings that are used for trading or investment purposes (but not for residential or furnished holiday let purposes) are eligible for a capital allowance.  The building cannot have been a dwelling the first time it was used or during the period the allowance is claimed.  The capital allowance is a ‘straight line’ calculation.  This means that the percentage that can be deducted from profits is a fixed percentage of the original construction cost.  The percentage was 2% from the time the allowance was introduced on 29 October 2018.  However, following the announcement from today, it will increase to 3% from the start of the next financial year, on 1 April 2020.

 

Investment in “Enterprise Zones”, which are specific locations in the UK will continue to enjoy Enhanced Capital Allowances until March 2021.

 

National insurance threshold to rise

 

 

The national insurance threshold will increase in 2020-21 to £9,500.  The new limit will reduce tax for sole traders and employees.  In recent years, the threshold for employers and employees has been the same.  However, the national insurance limit for employers is only increasing to £8,788.  The upper threshold will remain at £50,000.  The most tax efficient salary paid from a contractor company in 2020-21 will be £732.

 

Employment allowance up by £1,000

 

This tax relief exempts employers’, or secondary, national insurance.  It is not available to companies with only one director.  From 6 April 2020, the allowance will increase from £3,000 to £4,000.  There is a further national insurance concession for employers hiring army veterans.

 

Notable exceptions

 

  • The personal allowance and higher rate tax threshold have not been changed from their 2019-20 levels of £12,500 and £50,000 respectively.
  • The process by which the value of a tax threshold is eroded by inflation is referred to a fiscal drag.
  • It has been highlighted as an issue for nil rate band for inheritance tax which has been fixed at £325,000 since 6 April 2009.
  • The additional tax rate of 45% still begins at £150,000.
  • The personal allowance abatement threshold is also unchanged at £100,000.

 

Research and development credit rises

 

For qualifying expenditure on research, a company can claim an enhanced deduction from profits chargeable to corporation tax.  As an alternative to the enhanced deduction, the company can claim a credit.  The credit is a government payment equal to a percentage of the amount spent on R&D.  During the initial, loss making phase, the credit offers a more attractive cash flow alternative to enhanced expenditure.  The rate will increase from 12% to 13% on 1 April 2020.  A hike in the credit is aimed at promoting innovation and growth within the UK.

 

Non-resident companies owning property

 

Previously, a non-resident landlord company was subject to income tax.  However, from 6 April 2020 an overseas entity owning UK property will be subject to the same rules as a UK company.  In practice, the ruling removes overseas investors from the requirement to join the non-resident landlord scheme.  This scheme requires letting agents to withhold basic rate tax at source, unless HMRC approves an application to join the NRL scheme.  There is no tax incentive for new landlords to operate via a non-resident company.  Any foreign tax has been suffered on income will be available as a credit to reduce UK tax on the equivalent income.

 

Corporation tax unchanged

 

Corporation tax had previously been scheduled to reduce to 17% on 1 April 2020.  This was announced in the 2016 Budget.  However, as confirmed by the Budget today, the rate will remain at 19% for 2020-21.  The rate applied to Financial Year 2021, i.e. starting 1 April 2021, will also be 19%. 

 

Capital gains tax rate

 

The capital gains tax allowance will increase from £12,000 to £12,300 from 6 April 2020.  The rate is set to increase by the Consumer Price Index (CPI) rounded up to the nearest £100.  The rate applicable to trustees is half, i.e. £6,150.

 

Restriction on use of carry forward losses for large companies

 

Where a company makes a loss on an asset, this loss can be carried forward and set against future capital gains.  Announced in today’s Budget was a restriction which will allow only 50% of the allowable loss to be set against future gains of a company.  The new restriction applies to gains made on or after 1 April 2020.  The loss only applies to profits over £5 million.  It will not impact the small business sector directly.  Losses suffered by individuals are not affected by the proposal.

 

Other measures

 

  • Introduction of a stamp duty surcharge from April 2021, of 2% to non-residents.
  • Abolition of VAT on digital publication and sanitary products.
  • No planned increase in alcohol duty.
  • Cut interest rates on social housing by 1%.
  • A 100% discount on business rates for a wide range of retailers and entertainment venues.
  • Statutory sick pay is available for all self-isolated patients from day one, even if not displaying symptoms of coronavirus.

 

Summary

 

In response to the economic impact of coronavirus and a rate cut of 50 basis points in the morning, the Budget was aimed at reassuring markets with a package of fiscal stimuluses.  Policy was aimed as a reward to voters in the North and much called upon relief to the struggling high-street.  The UK still carries the highest tax rates of personal tax in the world.  It remains to be seen whether the spending plan can be sustainable in the context of an increasing mobile population.

Optimal contractor salary for 2019-20

 

Written by Ray Coman

 

2019-20-salary calculationAs the end of the tax year approaches, the following calculations explain the optimal salary payments for companies with a sole director.

 

Employer's national insurance

Employment allowance

Tax planning

 

Employer's national insurance

 

A salary which is equal to the national insurance threshold of £719 is the most tax efficient.  A higher salary would give rise to 13.8% national insurance.

 

For instance, if a salary were paid up to the personal allowance threshold for 2019-20, the additional salary would be £12,500 minus £8,628, or £3,872.

  • Corporation tax saving on additional salary @19% = £735.68
  • Employers’ national insurance @13.8% = -£534.36
  • Corporation tax saving on employer’s NI as calculated above @ 19% = £101.52
  • Employee’s national insurance at 12% = - £464.64

 

(There is a slight increase in dividend which is as follows:

 

  • The reduction in corporation tax on salary would now be treated as dividend: £735.68
  • The reduction in corporation tax on employers’ national insurance would now be treated as dividend: £101.53
  • The employer’s NI would otherwise be treated as dividend: £534.34)

 

Net increase in income tax of £302.87 @ 7.5% or £22.72

Net tax cost = £184.52

 

The lower salary also spares the hassle (and exposure to late payment penalty) of having to make monthly PAYE payments.

Tax saving if paid as dividend rather than salary is £184.52.

 

Employment allowance

For contractors who subsequently hire staff, a higher salary could be beneficial.

Further information about this scenario can be found in point 14 of the guidance below:

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/employment-allowance-more-detailed-guidance/single-director-companies-and-employment-allowance-further-employer-guidance

 

Provided the £3,000 employment allowance is still intact (and not used up with salary payments to the employees) the tax savings are as follows:

  • The additional salary would be £12,500 minus £8,628, or £3,872.
  • Corporation tax saving on additional salary @19% = £735.68
  • Employee’s national insurance at 12% = - £464.64
  • (There is a slight increase in dividend which is as follows:
  • The reduction in corporation tax on salary would now be treated as dividend: £735.68)
  • Net increase in income tax of £735.68 @ 7.5% or £55.18

Net tax saving = £215.86

 

Tax planning

 

Careful director’s remuneration planning should consider:

 

  • Optimal salary payments;
  • Timing of dividend extraction;
  • Use of proposed dividend to bring total income up to higher rate tax threshold;
  • Pension contribution;
  • Accumulation of retained profit for extraction as capital on eventual dissolution or sale of the business;
  • Addition of family members with whom the owner shares household bills; and
  • Investment in capital.

Simple situations. Complex situations. If it goes on a Tax Return we deal with it. Contact us for a free, initial meeting.

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