Archive for the 'General' Category

Electric Cars are cool!!

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Or so the Government would like us to believe. From 6 April 2010 if you provide your employee with an electric car or van for their own use, it will be a tax free benefit. What’s more when your company buys a new electric van from 1 April 2010 it will be able to write-off the full cost for tax purposes in the year of acquisition. This tax treatment already applies to all new low emission and electric cars. These new tax incentives only apply to fully electric vehicles, hybrids don’t count.

The taxable benefit charged for the use of ordinary company cars and vans, and fuel for those vehicles, is set to increase from 6 April 2010. For example the driver of a car with CO2 emissions of 160g/km is currently taxed at 20% of the vehicle’s list price. From 6 April 2010 the driver of the same car will be taxed at 21% of its list price. Currently the fuel benefit for that vehicle is based on a fixed value of £16,900, From 6 April 2010 this value will increase to £18,000. Hence the taxable benefit of having free fuel for the car will increase from £3,380 to £3,780.The taxable benefit charged when fuel is provided for private use in a company van will increase from 6 April 2010 from £500 per year to £550 per year.

 

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Online Filing of VAT Returns

Friday, March 5th, 2010

You may have recently received a letter from the VATman that officially notifies your company or business to file its VAT return online, or face penalties. If your business had a turnover of £100,000 or more in the year ending 31 December 2009 you are legally required to file your VAT returns online, rather than as a paper form, for all periods beginning on or after 1 April 2010. So you can file your VAT return for the quarter to 31 March 2010 on paper, but VAT returns for later periods must be submitted online.If you don’t agree that your turnover was £100,000 or more in the year to 31 December 2009, you need appeal against the VATman’s decision within 30 days of the date of his letter. The VATman has not sent a copy of his letter to us, so please forward it on if you have concerns about this turnover threshold. If you want us to submit your VAT returns online on your behalf we will need that letter as it contains some key details for the registration process.Even if you have already filed several of your VAT returns online, and your turnover is over £100,000, you will still receive the notification letter from the VATman, including the expensive glossy brochure. If your turnover is currently less than £100,000 per year, you will not have to file your VAT returns online until 2011. The Government has announced that all VAT registered businesses will be required to file their VAT returns online from April 2011, but that requirement is not law yet.If your business first registers for VAT on or after 1 April 2010 you will be required to file all your VAT returns online from your first VAT return, even if your turnover is way below the £100,000 threshold.

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