Corporation Tax and VAT Flashcards
The VAT charge
VAT is charged on
· any supply of goods or services made in the UK
· where it is a taxable supply
· made by a taxable person
· in the course or furtherance of any business carried on by that person.
VAT Terminology
Supply of Goods or Services: Any supply made in the UK of goods or services done in return for consideration.
Made in the UK: The place of supply of the relevant goods or services must be in the UK. There are complex rules for working out the place of supply for VAT purposes in cross-border transactions, which are outside the scope of these materials.
Taxable supply: Any supply made in the UK which is not an exempt supply. See below for the various types of supply.
Taxable person: A person who is, or is required to be, registered for VAT purposes. ‘Person’ includes individuals, partners, companies and unincorporated organisations.
In the course or furtherance of any business carried on by him: ‘Business’ is a very wide term and basically any economic activity carried on, on a regular basis. An employee’s services to an employer are excluded. All of a person’s business activities are included in one VAT registration.
Registration
A person is required to be registered:
at the end of any month if the value of his/her taxable supplies in the period of one year or less has exceeded the VAT registration threshold (the person must notify HMRC within 30 days of the end of that month and will be registered from the beginning of the second month after the taxable supplies went over the threshold); or
at any time if there are reasonable grounds for believing that the value of his/her taxable supplies in a period of 30 days then beginning will exceed the VAT registration threshold (the person must notify HMRC within the 30 days and will be registered from the beginning of the 30 days).
Please note that the registration thresholds (and the deregistration threshold as referred to later) change from time to time. The current registration threshold is £85,000.
Alternatively, a person can register voluntarily. Voluntary registration means that input VAT can be recovered (which is helpful to a business in reducing costs). However, it also means that the business will have to charge output VAT on supplies of goods and services to its customers (which may make the business less attractive to customers than its unregistered competitors).
De-registration
A VAT registered person may apply to have the registration cancelled and accordingly cease to be ‘taxable’ (even though continuing to carry on the business) where the value of his/her future annual taxable supplies will not exceed the VAT deregistration threshold. The current deregistration threshold is £83,000.
Output and input tax
Output tax
The VAT chargeable by a business when making a supply of goods or services is called ‘output’ tax. The VAT relates to the ‘output’ of the business.
Input tax
The VATpaidby a person on goods or services supplied to the person is called ‘input’ tax. The VAT relates to goods and services ‘bought in’ by the person.
A VAT registered business offsets input tax it has suffered (on goods and services it has purchased) against output tax it has charged customers or clients (on its own supplies) and only accounts for the difference to HMRC.
The business acts as a tax collector in collecting and paying to HMRC the tax on the value added by the business in the supply chain.
Note that where there is no output tax charged in any VAT accounting period, it is still usually possible to reclaim any input tax incurred where it is intended output tax will be charged in the future.
How much VAT?
The applicable rate of VAT will depend on the type of supply. The standard rate of VAT is currently 20%.
A price is deemed to be VAT inclusive unless the contract for the supply of goods or services states otherwise. In other words, the stated consideration paid for the supply includes any VAT payable.
Where the standard rate of VAT applies, in order to calculate the VAT element of a VAT inclusive price you should multiply the price by the VAT fraction, which is currently 1/6. This has been worked out as follows:
Tax rate = 20 = 1
100 + tax rate 120 = 6
The seller must account for the VAT element amount to HMRC, so the seller won’t be allowed to keep the full amount of the stated price. In practice, the seller can deduct any input VAT that it has incurred so it only needs to pay HMRC the difference.
In many situations it will be appropriate for the price of goods or services to be expressed as exclusive of VAT so that VAT is charged in addition to the stated price. Here, the seller will account to HMRC for the VAT element and keep the (VAT-exclusive) stated price.
Types of Supply
- Standard Rated
Generally, the standard rate of VAT is 20%. A supply by a business will be standard rated unless it falls within one of the other three categories.
A VAT registered business charges VAT at standard rate on its outputs and recovers any VAT suffered on its inputs (unless it makes supplies which fall into the exempt category below).
- Reduced Rated
A very limited number of types of supply are charged at 5%. These include supplies such as domestic heating and power, installation of mobility aids for the elderly, smoking cessation products and children’s car seats.
- Zero Rated
Further supplies are zero rated for public policy reasons. Zero rated supplies include food (within certain categories), sewerage and water, books / newspapers, talking books for the blind, new houses and the construction of new houses, public transport and children’s clothing.
Zero rated supplies fall into the category of taxable supplies. This means that when a VAT registered business makes zero rated supplies it charges VAT at the rate of 0% on its outputs and it can recover any VAT suffered on its inputs. This is therefore a very favourable supply for a business to make.
- Exempt
Supplies that are exempt include the provision of insurance, finance, education / health services and the sale of land and buildings (unless it comprises a new commercial building or the supplier of a commercial building has chosen to make the supply standard rated by waiving the exemption). When a business makes exempt supplies it does not charge VAT on its supplies but equally it is notable to recover any VAT suffered on its inputs. This input tax is a cost to the business.
Accounting for VAT to HMRC
- VAT Invoice
A taxable business making a standard (or reduced) rate supply of goods or services to another taxable business must supply the customer / client with a VAT invoice within 30 days of the supply and keep a copy. HMRC carries out regular inspections of businesses to ensure that input and copy output invoices have been kept.
- VAT Return
Taxable businesses must submit a VAT Return online to HMRC every three months. The due date is usually within one month and seven days after the end of the VAT period.
The VAT Return must show the total output tax charged on the making of taxable supplies during that VAT period less the total input tax attributable to the making of taxable supplies. At the same time the business must pay to HMRC the excess of the output tax charged over the input tax suffered.
Businesses that normally pay more than £2.3 million a year to HMRC in VAT must make monthly payments on account and then pay the balance when submitting the quarterly VAT return.
- Special Schemes
There are a number of special schemes designed to simplify accounting for VAT or to reduce VAT liability:
- Retail Schemes
There are special schemes for use by retailers who find it difficult to issue VAT invoices for the large number of supplies that they make direct to the public.
- Cash Accounting
Businesses whose annual turnover is less than £1,350,000 (excluding VAT and excluding exempt supplies) may opt to use a cash accounting scheme if they comply with certain conditions, i.e. output tax is accounted for when the invoice is paid rather than issued. However, input tax can only be recovered when the business pays the supplier.
- Annual Accounting
Businesses with an annual turnover not exceeding £1,350,000 (excluding VAT and excluding exempt supplies) may be permitted by HMRC to make an annual VAT Return. The VAT is paid by instalments during the year (based on the previous year’s VAT liability) with the balance being paid when the VAT Return is submitted.
- Flat Rate Scheme
Where a VAT-registered business has a taxable annual turnover not exceeding £150,000 (excluding VAT) and a total annual turnover (i.e. to include the VAT charged to the business, and the value of any exempt and other non-taxable income) not exceeding £230,000 the business may elect that VAT be charged at a flat rate on turnover rather than on every single transaction.
There is however not normally any relief for input VAT. The flat rate will depend on the type of business and HMRC publishes a table setting out the applicable rates for the different types of business such as hairdressers and estate agents. Since 1 April 2017, there are anti-avoidance rules requiring ‘limited cost traders’ who use a flat rate scheme to account for VAT at a rate of 16.5%.
Corporation Tax is payable on:
· all income profits and
· chargeable gains
· of a body corporate
· that arise in its accounting period.
The sum of a company’s profits and gains is known as ‘TTP’ (taxable total profits chargeable to corporation tax).
Companies are assessed to corporation tax by reference to the financial year (1 April – 31 March). Note that because a company can choose its accounting period, it is often different to the financial year, which is the same for all companies.
The amount of TTP will determine the amount of corporation tax payable.
The rate of corporation tax for the tax year 2022/2023 was a flat rate of 19%. As of 1 April 2023, the main rate will increase to 25% for companies with profits greater than £250,000. A small profits rate of 19% will be introduced on 1 April 2023 for those companies whose profits do not exceed £50,000.
Calculation of TTP - basic proforma
Chargeable gains
Sale proceeds
[Allowable Expenditure]
[Indexation Allowance]
[Capital/Trading Losses]
= Chargeable Gain
Income profits
Income receipts
[Deductible Expenditure]
[Capital Allowances]
[Trading Losses]
= Income Profits
Tax treatment of income for corporation tax purposes
You have already looked at the nature of capital and income receipts. Income and capital receipts are subject to different tax rules, so it is necessary to identify the nature of the receipts. This is the case even though companies pay corporation tax at the same rates on income and gains.
Remember the basic rule that income receipts and expenditure arise through everyday trading whereas capital receipts and expenditure arise from one-off transactions.
What constitutes a company’s income?
The most common types of company income are:
- rental income;
- trading income;
- interest; and
- dividend income.
Taxable income profits
To calculate the taxable income profits, you must aggregate all chargeable income receipts and deduct all tax-deductible expenditure.
- chargeable income receipts: Receipts of an income nature which arise from the business or trading activity (and which are not exempt receipts).
- tax deductible expenditure: Expenditure by a company that the company is permitted to deduct from its income receipts, thereby reducing its overall tax bill.
Deductible expenditure for income purposes
To be deductible for tax purposes the expenditure must:
- be ‘…wholly and exclusively’ incurred for the purposes of the trade – eg expenditure which is partially by way of gift;
- not be prohibited by statute – eg business entertainment expenditure (i.e. money spent by a company entertaining its clients) and provisions made in accounts for doubtful debts; and
- be of an income nature – eg rent, interest paid, wages, repairs.
Adjustments for capital allowances
Capital expenditure is generally only deductible from capital receipts and not usually deductible to calculate income profits. In addition, depreciation (an accounting concept) is not an allowable deduction for tax purposes and therefore to allow businesses to spread the cost of certain capital assets over a period of time, ‘capital allowances’ are given as a deduction against income receipts.
Even though capital allowances relate to capital expenditure, the allowances are treated as a deduction for income purposes in calculating income profits. Capital allowances are available on qualifying items of expenditure.
Qualifying expenditure includes expenditure incurred on plant and machinery.
There are other special capital allowances that apply to, for example, long life assets, research and development expenditure and certain costs of construction and renovation of commercial buildings but these are outside the scope of the module.
Capital allowances are available to individuals and partnerships carrying on a trade as well as to companies.
Capital allowances on plant and machinery
Companies can deduct 18% of the value of plant and machinery (‘P&M’) from their income receipts each year on a ‘reducing balance’ basis. This means that when a company claims capital allowances in one year on P&M, the value of the P&M for tax purposes is reduced by 18%. This value is referred to as the ‘tax written down value’ or ‘TWDV’ of the P&M. When the company claims capital allowances in the following year, it will claim 18% of the TWDV of the P&M after it has been reduced by the previous year’s capital allowances claim.