Revenue Note for Guidance
Accelerated capital allowances are provided in respect of capital expenditure incurred on the construction or refurbishment of certain industrial buildings or structures such as factories, mills and similar type premises as well as dock undertakings. The building or structure must be situated in a qualifying rural area and must be used for the purposes of carrying on a trade. The accelerated capital allowances are available only in respect of capital expenditure incurred on construction or refurbishment work on a building or structure which is carried out in the qualifying period. An initial allowance of 50 per cent may be claimed by both owner-occupiers and lessors with annual allowances of 4 per cent available for the balance of the qualifying expenditure. Alternatively, an accelerated allowance known as free depreciation of up to 50 per cent is available to owner-occupiers only. Refurbishment expenditure on an industrial building only qualifies for allowances if it is not less than 10 per cent of the value of the building before refurbishment.
The accelerated capital allowances provided by this section are not available in certain circumstances – see section 372T for full details.
By virtue of the provisions of sections 270(4) to (7) and 316, the amount of capital expenditure incurred in the year 2007 and in the period 1 January 2008 to 31 July 2008 must be reduced to 75 per cent and 50 per cent respectively of the amount attributable to the period involved. An overall cap also applies on the amount of expenditure incurred in the period 1 January 2007 to 31 July 2008 which may qualify for relief.
(1) The section applies to industrial buildings or structures such as mills, factories and other similar premises and also to facilities such as piers and jetties situated in a qualifying rural area used for the purposes of a trade and which are built or refurbished in the qualifying period.
The normal industrial building writing-down allowances of 4 per cent per annum are already available under section 272 in respect of capital expenditure incurred on the construction or refurbishment of qualifying industrial buildings or structures. Accelerated capital allowances are now made available as follows in respect of such construction or refurbishment expenditure.
(2) An industrial building (initial) allowance of 50 per cent for capital expenditure incurred in the qualifying period on the construction or refurbishment of industrial buildings to which this section applies is made available under section 271 to owner-occupiers and lessors.
(3) Alternatively, free depreciation (an acceleration of the annual writing-down allowances) up to 50 per cent of construction or refurbishment expenditure incurred in the qualifying period may be claimed under section 273 by owner-occupiers. Lessors cannot claim free depreciation.
The balance of the qualifying expenditure may be written off at 4 per cent per annum where initial allowance or free depreciation is claimed.
The relieving provisions of this section (subsections (2) and (3)) are subject to sections 270(4) to (7) and section 316(2B). Under those sections, any capital expenditure incurred in the year 2007 and in the period 1 January 2008 to 31 July 2008 is subject to the respective reductions to 75 per cent and 50 per cent of the amount attributable to the period involved (see notes on section 270).
Additionally, by virtue of the provisions of section 270(7), the amount of expenditure incurred in the period 1 January 2007 to 31 July 2008 which may be taken into account in calculating capital allowances is capped at the amount of expenditure, projected to be incurred post 31 December 2006, which was certified by the local authority. This cap will apply prior to the application of the respective reductions to 75 per cent and 50 per cent of the capital expenditure for the period involved (see notes on section 270(7)).
Capital expenditure is regarded as incurred in a period only if it is attributable to work carried out in that period (see notes on section 316(2B)).
(4) The allowances provided for in the section are only available in the case of refurbishment expenditure where the capital expenditure incurred on refurbishment is not less than 10 per cent of the market value of the building before refurbishment.
(5) Where a sale or other event which normally might give rise to a balancing charge under section 274 occurs in relation to a qualifying industrial building or structure, a balancing charge will not be made if that event occurs more than 13 years after the building or structure was first used or, in the case where refurbishment expenditure on the building or structure qualified for capital allowances, more than 13 years after that expenditure was incurred.
(7) The capital expenditure which is to qualify for the industrial building (initial) allowance and free depreciation must be expenditure incurred on construction or refurbishment work actually carried out during the qualifying period. Where work commences, but is not completed, in the qualifying period, only the part of the expenditure referable to the work carried out in that period qualifies for those allowances. Of course, title to the normal writing-down allowances under section 272 still exist in relation to the part of the expenditure referable to work carried out outside the qualifying period.
This provision negates, for the purposes only of determining the amount of expenditure which is to qualify for the industrial building (initial) allowance and free depreciation, other provisions of the Tax Acts which, by treating expenditure as incurred later than the carrying out of the work, might otherwise deprive a person of those allowances. The provisions so negated are —
Relevant Date: Finance Act 2019