Archive for October, 2009

HMRC New Penalty Regime

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

HMRC have recently introduced a new penalty regime that applies to tax returns that under declare the amount of tax payable.  It applies to all tax return documents filed on or after 1st April 2009.  The penalties all centre around the care applied when producing and submitting the return.  In this article, we’ll look at why a penalty might be charged, the amounts of the penalty and what you can do to avoid getting charged.

Why might you get charged a HMRC penalty

The penalty regime is focused on both the accuracy of submitted information and the care that was taken in preparing the information.  HMRC state that there are four differant types of inacuracy:

  • An inacuracy made, despite the taxpayer taking reasonable care (in which case there will be no penalty)
  • A careless inacuracy
  • A deliberate, but not concealed error
  • A deliberate and concealed error

Penalties for inacuracies will impact across VAT, CIS, Income tax, Corporation Tax, Capital Gains Tax, PAYE and National insurance.

The penalty regime is designed to address the behaviours that led to the inacuracy.  As a result, the penalties for deliberate and concealed errors are substantially higher.

How much will you be charged

The penalties determined will depend upon how the error occured in the first place.  The regime has been put in place to encourage “correct compliance”.  An inacurate document must satisfy two conditions before the penalty can be charged:

  1. It must have led to an underpayment of tax, or a false reclaim of tax, and
  2. It must have been careless, deliberate or deliberate and concealed

If those two conditions are met, then a penalty can be applied.

The maximum levels of penalty range from 30% of the understatement of tax for a careless error, right through to 100% of tax due for a deliberate and concealed error.  A deliberate, but not concealed error, will lead to a maximum penalty of 70% of the tax due.

How to avoid being charged a penalty

The most obvious way of avoiding a penalty is not to make any mistakes on your tax returns!

However, occassionally mistakes do occur, so how can you reduce your penalties should you find yourself in thsi situation?

Quality of disclosure

Reductions of penalties can be made, dependant upon the quality of the disclosure following the discovery of the error:

  1. You can tell HMRC of the error, explaining how the error arose and making full disclosure of the inacuracies
  2. You can help HMRC in quantifying the under assessment
  3. You respond positively to requests for information and documents from HMRC

(These responses are taken from HMRC website)

The final way to avoid receiving penalties in the first place is to use your accountant to undertake as much of the work as possible in the first place.  Yes, it may cost you a few pounds more than you are currently paying, but could be well worth it in the long run to avoid being caught up in the penalty regime process.

Do you have a valid VAT invoice?

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

In my last post about reclaiming VAT on expenses incurred by an employee, I talked about getting a supplier to make out an invoice directly to the company.  But what should be included on a VAT invoice, and what will happen if any of the items that should be included, aren’t?

Valid VAT invoices

For an invoice to be valid in the taxman’s eyes, all of the following  must be present on the invoice:

  1. The invoice must contain a unique identifying invoice numberautomated-invoice-processing2
  2. The date of supply of goods/ services should be displayed
  3. The date of the invoice (the tax point)
  4. The name and address of the purchaser
  5. The type of supply (e.g sale of goods, lease, rental, commission etc)
  6. A description of the goods or services supplied
  7. For each description, a quantity of goods or extent of services supplied
  8. The total amount payable excluding VAT
  9. The rate and amount of any discounts offered
  10. The rates of VAT applied
  11. The amount of tax chargeable at each VAT rate
  12. The total amount of VAT chargeable

If any of the above is missing from an invoice, it is not a valid invoice for tax purposes and there is no legal entitlement to reclaim VAT on it.  It has been known for input VAT claims to be refused because of minor ommissions.

VAT invoice Tip

I would recommend using the list above as a checklist for supplier invoices.  Make sure you carry out spot checks on invoices you receive to ensure they meet all the criteria for being valid and that you don’t miss out on potential VAT reclaims.

Don’t fall foul of the VAT reclaim trap

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

There are occassions where the director of a business will need to pay for business expenditure out of his or her own pocket.  For example, you could be away on a trip and see a shiny new must have piece of equipment at a knock down price.  You don’t have your company card with you, but do have enough cash in your personal account, so you buy it and then claim it back on expenses from the company.  The problem is that the receipt is likely to be in your name, rather than the company’s, so how will the VAT inspector react on a VAT inspection?

The VAT reclaim rules in black and white

The law states that if a business wishes to reclaim VAT on purchases, several conditions must first be met, otherwise the VAT inspector could refuse your claim.  The two basic rules are:

  • The VAT must have been incurred by the person reclaiming it
  • The person making the reclaim must hold a valid VAT invoice for the supply

Exceptions to the rules

There are a couple of exceptions to these rules which all relate to small value purchases incurred in the course of business (i.e. less than £25 per transaction), such as:

  • Coin operated machinery
  • Car Parking
  • Toll charges
  • Telephone calls
  • subsistence claims

In these cases, the original receipt should be passed to the company by the employee/ director, but VAT can be reclaimed.

However, that doesn’t help with our original problem of the director buying a significant piece of equipment for the business on his personal card.

How to avoid the VAT trap

When you are buying goods in this way, you are really just acting as a conduit for your company, who are the real buyer, so you have met the first condition.

To meet the second it would be wise to ask the seller to make the invoice out to the company, even though you are paying the bill.  To avoid any concerns the seller may have, show him a business card to prove you are an employee of the company.