Minimising Tax on Company Cars
The cost of providing a company car is touching extremely high levels. Moreover, to make use of a company car for private purposes now requires careful consideration to minimise the tax costs.
There are a number of factors that can be considered including the following:
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The Basics
Company car tax charges depend on the vehicle’s list price, CO2 emissions, and the type of fuel. The lower the list price and CO2 emissions the lower the tax charge, although diesel vehicles carry a premium. There is no charge for cars that cannot produce CO2 emissions under any circumstances.
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Classic Cars
Cars aged 15 years+ with a market value of £15,000+ have the market value applied instead of the list price. But for those worth less than £15,000, the list price being utilise may be very low.
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Pool Car
If a company car is not normally kept at any individual’s residence, is not just used by one employee and where any private use is incidental to the business use, the car can qualify as a pool car and not be a taxable benefit at all.
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Cars in a Sole Trader or Partnership
By running a car through an unincorporated business for the business owner there is no benefit in kind. Instead, the tax-deductible expenses that can be claimed on the car are restricted by the private proportion of use but overall this is far more generous than the charges for a company-owned car. Some businesses will split their business into two trading elements with the cars being held on the unincorporated side.
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Cash Contribution
The list price that the car benefit depends on is turn down by any capital contribution by the employee up to a maximum of £5,000. It is possible for the company to loan the employee this amount as well, interest-free, without there being a benefit in kind on the interest free loan.
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Company Vans
There is no taxable benefit where employees have to take their company vans home and don’t have the permission for any other private use. Otherwise, the taxable benefit for the private use of a company van is £3,350 (with no reduction for older vans) plus a further £633 of taxable benefit if fuel is provided by the employer for private travel. The difference between a large car and a van can be marginal, but vans are generally those built to carry goods with a design weight of up to 3,500Kg. A double cab pick-up is defined as a van if it can carry a payload of at least 1 tonne.
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Private Fuel
A charge for private fuel applies even if only a minimal amount of private petrol is being utilise so it is often better to avoid this in the first place or look at repaying the private fuel provided to avoid the charge.
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Home to work travel
Be aware that this generally counts as private travel, not business travel.
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Tax-Free Mileage Allowance
If you own the car personally and use it for business purposes, you can charge the business for business-related journeys and receive the amounts tax-free. The tax-free limit is presently at 45p per mile for the first 10,000 miles and 25p thereafter and can often prove to be better to do this than to have a company car. The company can also reclaim VAT on the fuel element of this payment.
How We Can Help You
We can assist you with tax planning advice in relation to your company car. Please contact us for further advice.