Home > Off Topic > This is gonna hurt! VAN / Double Cab Benefit changes.. |
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camelman Member Since: 27 Feb 2013 Location: Peak District Posts: 3373 |
In case anyone hadn't spotted it, the change in tax from 'van' to 'car' for benefit in kind is coming back in next April....
https://www.fleetnews.co.uk/news/double-ca...mpany-cars |
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6th Nov 2024 7:27am |
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Brendon Member Since: 15 Aug 2021 Location: Saint Albans Posts: 2 |
How will this affect private users?
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6th Nov 2024 9:54am |
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camelman Member Since: 27 Feb 2013 Location: Peak District Posts: 3373 |
If the double cab is owned privately by an individual, they won't be affected. A large number of double cabs are currently bought by business and provided to employees or company directors as 'company vans'. This means they avoid a significant company car tax (up to a 3rd of the value of the vehicle) and instead pay tax on the 'van benefit' which is just under £4k. The business can also pay for all of the diesel used (inc private use) and the driver is taxed on approximately £600 benefit a year. The fuel benefit if a business pays for 'company cars' fuel is enormous. The other tax advantage is that a business can currently write 100% of the value of a 'van' off in the first year against profits. Company cars are only allowed a certain percentage per year. The previous government tried this but bottled it at the last minute. |
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6th Nov 2024 11:27am |
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camelman Member Since: 27 Feb 2013 Location: Peak District Posts: 3373 |
I'm also assuming that this will apply to 110/130 double cabs as well....
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6th Nov 2024 11:34am |
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blackwolf Member Since: 03 Nov 2009 Location: South West England Posts: 17443 |
Yes, it will.
The only people I feel sorry for are those who bought a DCPU vehicle for genuine need, the majority of new(ish) ones now on the road have been chosen solely for tax avoidance (NB avoidance, not evasion, because it is wholly legal) reasons, and however callous it may sound for them I have not one iota of sympathy. A couple of years ago I attended the funeral of a friend who worked for decades at the local Ford dealership. The funeral was well-attended by his former colleagues from the dealership and from the parent chain to which it belonged. There were something like 80 Ford Rangers in the car park (and only about 15 normal cars) and it was imemdiately apparent that every "company car" was a Ranger, and not a single one gave the slightest indication of being a working pickup, they were just used as four-seater cars with a big boot. No wonder that our new sympathetic caring government has closed the loophole, but pity the poor sod who genuinely needs one for work purposes. |
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6th Nov 2024 12:53pm |
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90 Dreamer Member Since: 13 Jul 2019 Location: Oop North Posts: 2165 |
"if" you can show it is parked at commercial premises and not taken to a Home Address I believe its still a "proper" commercial for tax purposes.........
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6th Nov 2024 2:28pm |
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pjm-84 Member Since: 12 Apr 2021 Location: Hampshire Posts: 662 |
Yes...case history on this.
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6th Nov 2024 2:44pm |
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CarMan Member Since: 29 Nov 2010 Location: Cotswolds Posts: 1862 |
Since the new legislation Rob
1993 200tdi 90 hard-top 1998 300tdi 90 soft-top 2016 2.2 XS 90 hard-top (sold) |
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6th Nov 2024 3:06pm |
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Shroppy Member Since: 25 Feb 2016 Location: Shropshire Posts: 866 |
I can't find a great deal on this... am I right in thinking that:
1. If a company were to buy a 'double cab' pre April 2025, they can still use the current capital allowance treatment, i.e. 100% write off? 2. If it is used solely for business purposes, it will still be exempt from BIK? 1985 127 V8 Build Thread Series 2 109" Series 1 80" |
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6th Nov 2024 3:09pm |
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pjm-84 Member Since: 12 Apr 2021 Location: Hampshire Posts: 662 |
Way too soon....but the case history would apply, as its the BIK argument |
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6th Nov 2024 3:14pm |
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custom90 Member Since: 21 Jan 2010 Location: South West, England. Posts: 20441 |
Just to raise awareness see this article:
Click Here. It is off topic, but I thought I’d share on the down low so people are aware without it being conspicuous. That kind of thing has been going on a while, but stay vigilant wherever you are. $W33T $0U7H3RN $UG4R 🇬🇧🏴🏴🏴🇮🇪🇺🇸⛽️🛢️⚙️🧰💪 |
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6th Nov 2024 3:21pm |
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lightning Member Since: 23 Apr 2009 Location: High Peak, Derbyshire Posts: 2840 |
lf buying as a company vehicle you can carry the cost forward in tax benefits for instance if the van is £60,000 and your taxable income is £30,000 you generate a loss in the business that year so it's carried forward to the next year.
You can also claim a refund of corporation tax for the preceding year if you want. When l bought my Defender Commercial l benefitted from the "Super Deduction" scheme so have paid no corporation tax for three years. You can of course also claim back the VAT although not being VAT registered couldn't do that. This is why the Defender Commercial is so popular and there's still a waiting list. |
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17th Dec 2024 8:09am |
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