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Professional accountants serving the UK and helping small businesses to grow!

Whether you are an expanding company or just starting up, KAMP Accountants is here to help.

With extensive experience working with large and small clients throughout the UK, we support large and small business in a broad range of business sectors with all their accountancy requirements.

November questions and answers

Newsletter issue - November 2016.

Q. I have recently set up my own business after having been employed for many years. Although I am hopeful that I will eventually make a profit, I anticipate that I am likely to make a small loss in each of my first three years of trading. What is the best way for me to utilise these losses for tax purposes?

A. If a business is being carried on a commercial basis with a view to making a profit, it is generally possible to claim relief for a trading loss in one tax year against other taxable income (for example PAYE income or a pension) from the same year, or the one before. You will be free to decide which year to claim the losses against. You should note that HMRC will restrict loss relief if you carry on a trade but spend an average of less than ten hours a week on commercial activities.

Where a loss is incurred in any of the first four tax years of a new business, the loss can be carried back against total income of the three previous tax years, starting with the earliest year. Therefore, if you paid tax in any of the previous three years, you should be entitled to a repayment of tax, which may be especially welcome in those often difficult early years of trade. You must offset the maximum for each year - it is not permissible to offset just a proportion of the loss in order to spread the loss across three years to take advantage of beneficial tax rates. Again, relief will not be available unless you were trading on a commercial basis with a view to making a profit within a reasonable timescale. In practice, this requirement may be difficult to prove in the case of a new business and you may need a viable business plan to support a claim.

A cap on relief was introduced in April 2013, which applies to certain previously unlimited income tax reliefs that may be deducted from income. Trade loss relief against general income, and early trade losses relief, as outlined above, are two areas where this relatively new restriction will apply. The cap is set at £50,000 or 25% of income (calculated using a specific formula), whichever is greater.

Where a trader makes a loss in a year, but does not have any other income against which the loss can be set, he or she can carry it forward indefinitely and use it to reduce the first available profits of the same business in subsequent years.

A taxpayer can also set any losses arising from a business against any chargeable capital gains. The relief can be claimed for the tax year of the loss and/or the previous tax year. However, the trading loss first has to be used against any other income the taxpayer may have for the year of the claim (for example, against earnings from employment) in priority to any capital gains.

Q. My wife and I are both directors of a company and we are soon to relocate to another part of the country to set up a new branch. The existing branch will continue to be run by the two other company directors. Will we both be entitled to the £8,000 relocation expense exemption?

A. As long as you are both employees of the company in your own right, the exemption provisions in ITEPA 2003, s 287 should render you both eligible for the £8,000 exemption. Further information on relocation costs for tax purposes can be found on the GOV.UK website at https://www.gov.uk/expenses-and-benefits-relocation.

Q. I use the Flat Rate Scheme for VAT purposes. Can I claim back the VAT I have recently paid on some new equipment I have bought for the business?

A. If you use the Flat Rate Scheme, you can reclaim the VAT you have been charged on a single purchase of capital expenditure goods where the amount of the purchase, including VAT, is £2,000 or more. You reclaim the input tax suffered by making an entry in box 4 of your VAT return. If the costs cover more than one purchase and the total is less than £2,000, or the purchases relate to a supply of services, then no VAT is claimable, as this input tax is already taken into account in the calculation of your flat rate percentage. Further information on the Flat Rate Scheme for VAT can be found on the GOV.UK website at https://www.gov.uk/vat-flat-rate-scheme.

Fees for non-recurrent services would be based on time involved and would be agreed before we start work on given task.

  • Accounts and Taxation
  • Accounts prepared on time and presented to you at your premises
  • Income tax calculations and projections
  • Annual superannuation certificates for Partners
  • Practice manager training about bookkeeping
  • 2 - 4 meetings in a year at your premises
  • Personal expenses
  • Payroll
  • SD55 for practice staff
  • Installation and training in respect of practice computerised accounting system
  • Unlimited telephone and email support for adhoc queries

Non - recurrent Services

•VAT advice •Capital gains tax planning •Partnership agreements •Surgeries finances •Pension planning •Budget and cashflow planning •Inheritance Tax planning

Recurrent Annual Services based on fixed fee:

  • Accounts and Taxation
  • Accounts prepared on time and presented to you at your premises
  • Income tax calculations for Principles and Associates
  • Practice manager training about bookkeeping
  • 2-4 meetings in a year at your premises
  • Personal expenses
  • Payroll
  • SD55 for practice staff
  • Installation and training in respect of practice computerised accounting system
  • Unlimited telephone and email support for adhoc queries

Non - recurrent Services

  • VAT advice
  • Capital gains tax planning
  • Partnership agreements
  • Surgeries finances
  • Pension planning
  • Budget and cashflow planning
  • Inheritance Tax planning

Fees for non-recurrent services would be based on time involved and would be agreed before we start work on given task.

Medical Practices

Our specialist team provides a wide range of accounting and business services to General Practice.

Recurrent Annual Services based on fixed fee:

Dental Surgeries

Fees for non-recurrent services would be based on time involved and would be agreed before we start work on given task.

Recurrent Annual Services based on fixed fee: