EDEN NEWSLETTER SEPTEMBER 2011
Our newsletter this month contains the following articles: clarification of
unjust enrichment, change in VAT status of salary sacrifice schemes, stamp duty
changes for multiple purchases and notification of new HMRC crack-downs.
- What is unjust enrichment?
- HMRC to charge VAT on salary sacrifice schemes
- Stamp duty reduction for multiple purchases
- HMRC extend its tax avoidance crack down.
- Tax Diary September/October 2011
What is unjust enrichment?
If you charge a customer VAT and subsequently discover that the supply of
goods or services was exempt, zero rated or outside the scope of VAT you can
make a claim to HMRC to refund the VAT overcharged.
The phrase “unjust enrichment” means that you are required by HMRC to refund
any VAT repaid to you in this way to your customers, you cannot keep the refund
for yourself!
HMRC have a special reimbursement scheme that deals with claims for
repayment. When making a claim you will have to agree to:
- Sign a formal undertaking that you will comply with the terms of the
reimbursement. - Make all refunds to your customers within 90 days.
- Repay any residual amounts not returned to customers within 14 days of the
90 day time limit. - Pass on any statutory interest paid with the refunds to your customers.
Additionally you will have to keep the following records:
- Names and addresses of the customers you intend to reimburse.
- Total amount paid to each customer.
- Amount of interest paid to each customer.
- Date you refunded the money.
HMRC will also seek to reduce refunds due if the supply resulted in a claim
for associated VAT input tax. For example if you supplied services at standard
rate and there were associated costs where you recovered input tax, and then you
discovered that the supply should have been an exempt supply, then HMRC would
reduce the refund of over-declared output tax by the over-claimed, associated,
input tax.
If you need to make a claim under the reimbursement scheme you will need to
submit a formal undertaking in writing. Please contact us and we will organise
this for you.
HMRC to charge VAT on salary sacrifice
schemes
Due to a recent European Court of Justice ruling, HMRC now consider that the
provision of a benefit via salary sacrifice to employees constitutes a supply of
services for consideration and is therefore subject to VAT.
Benefits that will be affected include:
- Cycle to work schemes.
- Face value vouchers.
- Childcare vouchers.
- Food and catering provided by employers.
To give employers time to make the necessary changes to their record keeping
HMRC will not require output tax to be accounted for on salary sacrifice
supplies until 1 January 2012.
Stamp duty reduction for multiple purchases
A new relief is available from 19 July 2011 that will reduce stamp duty
payable if you are purchasing more than one residential property in a single
transaction.
Instead of paying SDLT based on the full value of properties added together,
the aggregate value, you can claim to pay SDLT based on the full value on the
properties divided by the number of properties purchased, the average value.
Where your claim is accepted this could result in a considerable saving.
Claims cannot reduce the overall SDLT charge below 1%.
Transactions covered by the relief are either of the following. Apologies for
the complex phrasing, the definitions are copied from HMRC notes:
- a transaction, the main subject-matter of which includes interests in more
than one dwelling, - a transaction which is one of a number of linked transactions, the main
subject-matter of which includes interests in at least one dwelling and where
one or more transactions linked to it includes interests in at least one other
dwelling.
As you can no doubt appreciate there are a number of grey areas but do seek
advice if you are making multiple property purchases after 19 July 2011, savings
may be worth the effort involved.
HMRC extend its tax avoidance crack down.
VAT registration
HMRC are of the opinion that there are a number of businesses that should be
registered for VAT, and so far, they have not registered. They are in the
process of sending out 40,000 letters to traders who they believe may be in this
category.
HMRC are offering businesses that “come clean” and notify HMRC of an
intention to register before the end of September 2011, reduced or nil
penalties. Subsequently formal applications have to be submitted on VAT form 1
before 31 December 2011.
The current VAT registration threshold is £73,000. If you have already passed
this annual limit in the last twelve months, are about to, or expect to in the
next 30 days, you might like to respond to this offer.
Penalties for late registration can be up to 100% of additional VAT due.
Fast Food Outlets
HMRC believes that there are a number of fast food outlets that are
deliberately falsifying their records and miss-declaring their true sales levels
in order to avoid paying their correct taxes.
They have set up yet another specialist task force to tackle this
avoidance.
Penalties will be levied in addition to recovery of unpaid taxes. Those
businesses discovered may also face criminal prosecution.
Tax Diary September/October 2011
1 September 2011 – Due date for corporation tax due for the
year ended 30 November 2010.
19 September 2011 – PAYE and NIC deductions due for month
ended 5 September 2011. (If you pay your tax electronically the due date is 22
September 2011.)
19 September 2011 – Filing deadline for the CIS300 monthly
return for the month ended 5 September 2011.
19 September 2011 – CIS tax deducted for the month ended 5
September 2011 is payable by today.
1 October 2011 – Due date for corporation tax due for the
year ended 31 December 2010.
19 October 2011 – PAYE and NIC deductions due for month
ended 5 October 2011. (If you pay your tax electronically the due date is 22
October 2011.)
19 October 2011 – Filing deadline for the CIS300 monthly
return for the month ended 5 October 2011.
19 October 2011 – CIS tax deducted for the month ended 5
October 2011 is payable by today.
DISCLAIMER – PLEASE NOTE: The ideas shared with you in this newsletter are intended to inform rather than advise. Taxpayers’ circumstances do vary and if you feel that tax strategies we have outlined may be beneficial it is important that you contact us before implementation. If you do or do not take action as a result of reading this newsletter, before receiving our written endorsement, we will accept no responsibility for any financial loss incurred.




