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Smith Emmerson Accountants

                             

An Introduction to Corporation Tax

 

There are two rates of corporation tax, and one effective marginal rate, as follows:

 

Year commencing

1 April 2007

Taxable Profits

Tax Rate

First £300,000

20%

Next £1,200,000

32.5%

Over £1,500,000

30%

 


 

The rate bands are scaled down where a company has associated companies (members of the same group or companies controlled by the same persons).

 

Self Assessment

 

A company has to estimate its own corporation tax liability and pay this on the due date, which is nine months and one day after the end of its accounting period.

 

A corporation tax return has to be filed with HM Revenue & Customs within twelve months of the company’s year end, although by concession an extra week is allowed.

 

Interest is charged on late payment of corporation tax, and there are also penalties for late filing of a corporation tax return.

 

Tax Saving Tips

 

Expenses

 

Expenditure incurred before the company year end might reduce the current year’s tax liability instead of next year’s. Bringing forward expenditure by even a few weeks on, for example, building repairs, advertising, sales and marketing campaigns, and any other item deductible from profits can accelerate the tax relief by twelve months.

 

Plant and equipment

 

Investments in plant and equipment (not usually cars) by small companies (as defined

 

by the Companies Act 1985) attract a first year allowance of 50% (medium sized 40%). After the first year, relief is given by writing down allowances of 25% on the tax written down value. For large companies there is no first year allowance – relief is restricted to the 25% writing down allowance. The writing down allowance is being reduced to 20% from 2008/09

 

Companies that invest in energy-saving technology (including low-emission cars and water efficient technologies) can claim 100% first year allowances.

 

Writing down allowances on assets with a working life of twenty-five years or more are limited to 6% (10% from 2008/09) for companies spending more than £100,000 a year on such assets.

 

Where commercially and financially appropriate, capital expenditure should be brought forward to make the earliest use of the available allowances.

 

Hire purchase and lease purchase

 

Hire purchase and lease purchase may provide a useful method of financing the purchase of an asset. Plant and equipment purchased on hire purchase will qualify for writing down allowance on the full purchase price, even if the company has paid only the deposit.

 

 

 

Industrial buildings

 

Expenditure on new industrial buildings qualifies for writing down allowance of 4% on cost. Used industrial buildings may also qualify for an allowance, dependent upon allowances available to previous owners. Industrial buildings allowances will be abolished by 2010/11.

 

Provisions

 

Specific provisions against bad debts or stock are allowable for tax purposes, but general provisions are not.

 

Bonuses to directors and staff

 

A proper provision may be made in the annual accounts for specific bonuses paid up to nine months after the year end. Take care to ensure that these are charged to PAYE and NI as appropriate.

 

Pension contributions

 

Contributions to registered pension schemes are normally allowable for tax in the year of payment. Tax relief may need to be spread where contributions in the current period are more than 2.1 times those of the previous period. The excess is the amount of the contribution that exceeds 1.1 times the contributions paid in the previous period. Where the amount of this excess is £500,000 or more the tax relief will be spread over 2 to 4 years.

Please note: Most income and capital gains earned by a pension fund on sums invested are tax free.

 

Capital gains

 

Capital gains are taxed at the effective rate of corporation tax. Gains are calculated after deducting from the sale proceeds the market value at March 1982 (or cost of acquisition, if

 

 

 

 

 later), costs incurred in improving the asset, an indexation allowance, and certain disposal costs.

Reducing capital gains

 

Rollover relief

 

Claim rollover relief if your company buys new chargeable business assets within one year before or three years after selling a business asset. This effectively postpones any tax liability until the new asset is sold. Special rules apply if the new asset is a wasting asset.

 

Negligible value claim

 

Claim relief on assets that have become worthless. A loss can be claimed even though the asset has not been sold, and this can then be offset against chargeable gains.

 

Crystallising capital losses

 

Assets that have fallen in value since March 1982 (or date of acquisition if later) could be sold, thereby crystallising capital losses to set against other chargeable gains. This is easily achieved if the asset is a quoted share or security.

 

Deferring capital gains

 

Capital gains are realised when an unconditional contract for the sale of an asset has been made. In the case of conditional contracts, the sale is regarded as taking place when the condition is satisfied. You can therefore use a conditional contract, or grant an option, to delay the gain until after the year end.

 

Whilst the above information is provided in the utmost good faith and is believed to be correct at the time of publication, reliance on this information is done so at your own risk and Smith Emmerson can take no responsibility for any consequence arising from the advice given.


For further information and advice, please contact us at:

87 Talbot Street . Nottingham . NG1 5GN

Tel:  0115 822 1319 . Fax: 0115 959 8179

Email:  mail@smithemmerson.co.uk

www.smithemmerson.co.uk

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