Capital Allowances

Go to Client followed by View and enter in a cessation date.

 


 

Business Tax automatically calculates the capital allowances for the period. To restrict these to zero:

Select Edit followed by Capital allowances and then C - Maintain. Select each asset in turn and amend the WDA/FYA field to zero.

Select E - Maintain pool and amend the WDA/FYA fields to zero.

 


 

In this case the company probably has some additions which qualify for first year allowances.

A balancing charge arises where the disposal value exceeds:

This means that if the disposal value exceeds the pool brought forward plus the non-FYA additions a balancing charge is incurred.

In such circumstances a company may be able to mitigate a potential balancing charge, either partly or completely, by not claiming FYAs on part of the expenditure.

Business Tax automatically calculates the balancing charge/allowances available. Users are now able to amend the WDV brought forward in the general pool if a balancing charge/allowance was claimed in error in the previous year.

 


 

The first year allowance, unlike the WDA, is a flat rate and should not be time apportioned.

 


 

The disposal proceeds brought into the capital allowances computation should be restricted to the cost of the asset CAA 1990 s26(2).   

 


 

Carry out the following procedure:

Select Edit | Capital allowances | A - Maintain assets

Highlight the asset concerned and click Change asset.

Select the No FYA option and save the screen.

 


 

Business Tax allocates the AIA against additions in the pools in the most tax efficient way firstly against additions in the special rate pool and then against additions in the general pool.

If there is still excess AIA unclaimed and the business has other non-pooled assets that qualify for the AIA then the user must used option C - Maintain to allocate the excess against these assets. The allowance should be allocated against assets based on which are likely to be retained in the business the longest.

 


 

Hybrid rate = (25 x BRD/CP) + (20 x ARD/CP)

Where the hybrid rate would be a figure with more than 2 decimal places, it is to be rounded up to the nearest second decimal place.

 

Definitions:

BRD - is the number of days in the chargeable period before the relevant date

ARD - is the number of days in the chargeable period on and after the relevant date

CP - is the number of days in the chargeable period.

The relevant date is:

(a) for corporation tax purposes, 1 April 2008, and

(b) for income tax purposes, 6 April 2008.