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A new era of tax planning

By Michael Heinicke

By Michael Heinicke

In this article Michael summarises some popular tax reliefs available to companies under the UK tax system

Corporation tax, VAT, PAYE, NIC, air passenger duty the list of taxes goes on and at considerable cost to business.

Hence, despite the frowns of the Public Accounts Committee and the attention of the media, tax planning - how, where and when tax will be incurred – remains of critical importance for UK businesses.

Nevertheless, public scrutiny has persuaded many companies to reconsider their tax strategies, focusing their efforts towards maximising ‘government sponsored’ tax reliefs and incentives.

This article provides an outline of four popular options open to companies of all sizes to manage their tax liabilities in a ‘clean-living’ way.

1. Maximise Tax Relief on Capex

Companies often under-claim tax relief (i.e. capital allowances) on fixed asset expenditure. Whilst ‘visible’ assets such as IT equipment, furniture and other chattels are relatively easily added to capital allowances pools, capital allowances on qualifying fixtures within buildings are often less visible or even overlooked entirely.

This applies equally to direct expenditure on property construction / refurbishments, in addition to acquisitions of used properties.

Whilst direct spend on equipment, furniture etc. is easily identifiable from a company’s fixed asset register, what lies behind building/construction work is usually contained within a Bill of Quantities (which might simply say ‘Valuation No. 3 - £100,000’) and not on a fixed asset register. Short of wading through a massive Bill of Quantities and allocating expenditure line by line to the most beneficial heads of claim, there will be, de facto, an under-claim.

The rules regarding the acquisitions of used properties, and who gets the entitlement to capital allowances are complex, and beyond the scope of this article, but key points to note are:

Thankfully, where capital allowances have been under-claimed, it usually isn’t too late to rectify the position. The time limits for capital allowances claims are generous – effectively there is no time limit – a company can identify qualifying expenditure and start to claim capital allowances on it at any time (provided that it still owns it) opening up the prospect of retrospective clams.

There are also a couple of special reliefs which are (frustratingly) often overlooked, and worthy of mention, because they are so good:

2. Explore the Patent Box

The patent box went live on 1 April 2013 and very few companies have fully grasped it, even those with patents.

The prize is an effective tax rate of 10% (via a further enhanced deduction) on qualifying company profits attributable to patents. The key thing to know is that if a product includes just one patent then the whole of the company’s turnover in respect of that product is, prima facie, within the patent box.

There are a number of nuances in calculating Patent Box profit which throw up surprising results – for example, it is possible that a profitable company with all of its sales from patents might have nil profits in the Patent Box and therefore get zero benefit. Equally, a company with just 25% of its sales from patents could end up with 75% of its profits in the Patent Box, and subject to a lower effective rate of tax of 10%.

Often, there are ways to optimise a company’s position, with some planning, but if the base position isn’t explored first that won’t be possible. Before we start to worry about what Margaret Hodge might think, here is the following from HMRC’s guidance:

The following points are also worth knowing:

3. Get a Super Deduction for R&D

R&D tax relief / credits allow a company to get greater tax deductions than the money they have actually spent.

For example, normally if a company incurs costs of £100k, the tax deduction is for £100k, saving tax (at current corporation tax rates) of £23k.

However, if the same company incurs costs of £100k in relation to ‘qualifying R&D’, the tax deduction is for £225k, saving tax of £52k.

In other words, there is an additional deduction equal to 125% of qualifying costs. That is the rate applying to Small and Medium sized Enterprises (“SMEs”). A separate, less favourable scheme applies for Large companies where the additional deduction is 30% of qualifying costs.

There is a generous definition of SME, which is effectively twice that of the normal EC definition, and it is possible for companies with up to 500 employees to still be regarded as SME.

Definition of SME for R&D purposes

< 500 employees and

Either Annual turnover not exceeding €100m or

Balance sheet totaling no more than €86m

The big question and often an area of subjectivity is whether or not the company is undertaking qualifying R&D. The good news is the breadth of the definition of R&D for tax purposes (according to the Department for Business, Innovation & Skills). Consequently, companies in non-obvious sectors such as food and construction have made valid R&D claims and saved significant amounts of tax.

Some other key points to note are as follows:

4. Exempt Overseas Branches

UK companies are subject to UK corporation tax on worldwide profits, regardless of where they are earned, with double tax relief available to the extent that the UK company has branches in overseas jurisdictions which are paying tax in those countries.

The UK company will pay corporation tax at an effective rate of at least the UK rate of 23%, and potentially more if the overseas branches are in countries with higher rates of tax than the UK.

Since July 2011 it has been possible to exempt overseas branches from UK corporation tax so that UK corporation tax is only due on UK profits. Where a company has branches in higher tax jurisdictions that has no tax benefit, as the election will not change the total amount of tax suffered, or indeed the tax authority to whom it is paid.

However, where the company has branches in jurisdictions with lower tax rates than the UK there is a real saving to be made. Take a UK company that has a branch in RoI - by making the branch exemption election, RoI profits can be ring-fenced from UK tax, and only chargeable in RoI, saving tax of 10.5% (being the difference between the current UK and RoI tax rates of 23% and 12.5% respectively) on the RoI profits.

Many companies in NI have operations in RoI and for those, making the branch exemption election is an easy way of trimming tax bills.

Conclusion

Whilst the above reliefs don’t apply to every business, they are applicable to some degree to most. Indeed many companies are able to avail of a combination of these incentives to significantly lower corporation tax bills and it’s not unusual for very profitable companies to have an overall effective tax rate of 0% (i.e. better than 12.5%!). That might sound wrong but it is exactly what government policy is seeking to achieve as in return such companies are creating high quality jobs (with significant PAYE and NIC income for HMRC), and improving the knowledge base and the overall competiveness of the UK in a global economy.

Michael Heinicke is a Senior Manager within PwC’s tax team in Belfast

Email: michael.heinicke@uk.pwc.com