Temporary first-year allowance saves tax
There are some generous tax breaks under the revised capital allowances regime. The latest in the Finance Bill 2009 is a temporary 40% first-year allowance (FYA) for expenditure on general plant and machinery. So what can you do now to maximise tax relief?
Most businesses, regardless of size, benefit from the 100% tax-allowable £50,000 annual investment allowance (AIA) for investment in their plant and machinery.
However, if you spend more than £50,000 in a year on most types of equipment, the excess expenditure attracts a writing-down allowance of only 20%. Equipment that becomes part of a building when fitted, eg a cold water system, is classed as an "integral feature" and attracts a writing-down tax allowance of only 10% a year. It was and still is worth considering bringing forward or delaying expenditure to avoid exceeding the £50,000 AIA limit in any one year.
The Finance Bill 2009 will allow businesses incurring expenditure in excess of the AIA cap to claim a 40% FYA instead of the 20% writing-down allowance. This temporary measure is intended only for the 12-month period beginning on 1 April 2009 (companies) or 6 April 2009 (individuals and partnerships). The 100% allowance for designated energy saving or environmentally beneficial plant or machinery continues alongside the temporary FYA.
Some expenditure does not qualify for the temporary FYA, primarily "special rate" expenditure (including long-life assets and integral features), expenditure on cars, and expenditure on assets for leasing.
A key point is that you still do not have to allocate expenditure to the AIA in the order you incur it. If you spend more than £50,000 on equipment, you can choose which expenditure falls within the AIA and which does not.
Please get in touch at the planning stage so that we can advise you on the new FYA rules. We can help you plan your business expenditure on assets to maximise your tax relief and carry out a review to ensure that you have claimed all available tax reliefs on what you have spent to date. Don’t pay more tax than is necessary.