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Class 1A NIC
- the dividing line with Class 1
The forms P11D, on which employers report to the Inland Revenue
benefits in kind (perks, for example company cars and private
medical insurance) and reimbursed expenses (travelling and
subsistence payments), require completion for the tax year 2001/02,
the deadline being 6 July 2002. Filling in the P11D is supposedly
easy as all items not involving the giving of cash to the employee
go on it. For tax purposes it has never been necessary to
distinguish between the reimbursement of expenses and pure benefits
in kind, since the P11D is a return of both.
However the distinction is vital now that Class 1A NICs are due on
all taxable benefits in kind. It is believed that many items which
employers have correctly recorded on P11Ds for many years but which
should always have attracted a Class 1 NIC liability are only now
being discovered. The marking of certain boxes ‘1A’ on the forms
highlights this. The key factor is whether the employer has made the
contract for the goods or services (benefit in kind) or whether the
employee incurred the original expense personally and is then
reimbursed by you.
The treatment of medical expenses, in particular, highlights this
point well. Medical treatment or insurance under an employer’s
contract is entered at section I of the P11D and correctly attracts
a Class 1A liability. This is the most usual circumstance. But
reimbursement to an employee of medical insurance premiums under
policies which the employee himself has taken out (perhaps before he
joined your company) are entered in section B, not attracting Class
1A – such amounts have always been liable to Class 1 NIC and
remain so.
It should be noted that where medical expenses are incurred outside
the UK and the treatment arises while the employee is working
outside the UK for the employer, no entry falls to be made on the
P11D, and neither Class 1 nor Class 1A liability (nor tax, in fact)
arises.
Home telephone bills constitute another type of expense where the
treatment can vary. Usually, the bill is that of your employee and
you reimburse it. In this case section O of the P11D applies and
there is Class 1 NIC (not Class 1A) on any private element that you
have reimbursed. If you paid the whole of the bill direct to the
supplier, section B is applicable, with the same NIC consequences.
If, however, you the employer have made the contract for the supply
of the telephone at the employee’s home, then Class 1A is due as
it is a pure benefit in kind, and section N (the brown box though,
not the blue one) is the correct section. Where Class 1A – as
opposed to Class 1 – is in point, then unless there is no private
use at all (unlikely), or it is ‘insubstantial’, Class 1A is due
on the entire amount, even though the employee will claim a tax
deduction for the business element. This principle applies to all
‘mixed use’ (that is part business and part private) benefit
provision. This point, in particular, highlights just how complex
the whole system has become.
With mobile phones the position is different yet again. As these are
not taxable and do not go on the P11D at all, there is consequently
no Class 1A liability. However this relates only to an employer
owned mobile. There is a trap in that where you merely reimburse the
employee’s own personal expense, this will be subject to Class 1
contributions, except on identifiable business calls. Until its
abolition a few years ago, the income tax scale charge of £200 also
only applied to employer provision and not reimbursement.
PAYE/NIC
problem areas
Thankfully, little has changed for 2002/03 and the PAYE
documentation and information that needs to be accumulated by
payroll software remains broadly unchanged.
Although cumbersome, it is important that all the NIC columns (1a to
1g) are completed accurately in each pay period, otherwise your P14s
are likely to be the subject of Inland Revenue query in due course.
Once year-end documents are queried in large volume, a visit from
the PAYE auditor may be only a short time away.
More and more forms can now be submitted to the Inland Revenue
securely over the internet. Although now too late for your recent
P35, there may still be time to register and then submit your Class
1A return (Form P11D(b)) in this way. Visit www.inlandrevenue.gov.uk
or telephone the IR Electronic Business Helpdesk on 08456 055999.
Free
fuel and mileage payments
Do you still provide your employees with fuel for private use with
their company cars? In many cases this will not be fiscally
worthwhile unless private mileage is substantial – over 10,000
miles a year. This is so even where the question of ceasing to
provide a company car has been looked at and the status quo adopted.
Not providing private fuel may save the employee some tax - possibly
a lot - and will also save you the Class 1A NIC. Of course,
employees may need some persuasion to give up a pre-existing benefit
- but point out to them the income tax they pay on the scale charge
and then compare that with the actual cost of private fuel. They may
then wish to start talking! Any change to procedures needs to take
place before 6 April in any year as a full year’s scale charge
applies otherwise. So if you have already provided any private fuel
this tax year, start planning for next year – you have plenty of
time to get employees used to the idea!
You may wish to introduce a system whereby employees using company
cars are reimbursed for their business mileage at an agreed rate.
The Revenue has recently published some suggested rates for
guidance.
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Inland Revenue
fuel-only mileage rates
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| Petrol |
| 1400
cc or less |
10p per mile |
| 1401
cc to 2000 cc |
12p per mile |
| over
2000 cc |
14p per mile |
| Diesel |
| up
to 2000 cc |
9p per mile |
| over
2000 cc |
12p per mile |
An alternative is for the employer to
continue paying for all fuel but to require the employee to
reimburse the cost of the fuel used for non-business purposes. In
this case the requirement to reimburse must also exist for the whole
year and it is important that the calculation is done accurately. It
is imperative that a detailed record of private miles travelled is
maintained, as if there is a question over the reimbursement made by
the employee there is a risk that the scale benefit charge will
apply in any event.
Statutory
Maternity Pay (SMP)
The lower weekly rate increased substantially to £75 from 7 (not 6)
April 2002. As the lower earnings limit is also £75 per week, there
could now once again be situations where the 90% of average earnings
payable in the first six weeks has to be topped up to £75.
Employers can generally reclaim 92% of SMP paid by reducing their
PAYE/NIC deductions. For 2002/03 more employers will be entitled to
reclaim a higher percentage of SMP paid as they will be treated as
‘small employers’. For payments of SMP paid in 2001/02 only
employers whose gross NIC bill for 2000/01 was less than £20,000
were entitled to claim 100% of the SMP paid plus a compensation
payment of 5%. The term ‘small employers’ has been redefined as
regards payments of SMP made on and after 6 April 2002. A small
employer for this purpose is now one whose gross Class 1 NIC
liability in the previous year was less than £40,000, although the
additional compensation has reduced slightly to 4.5%.
If you were paying SMP to an employee as at 5 April and paid more
than £20,000 Class 1 NIC in 2000/01, but paid less than £40,000 in
2001/02 you can recover 104.5% of payments made on and after 6
April. And if this has so far been overlooked it is not too late to
reduce your next monthly or quarterly remittance.
How
much do you owe?
It is a common misconception that arrears of NIC can only be
demanded for the last six years. The legislation contains no limit
and the Revenue may request payments for an indefinite period.
However often arrears beyond the last six years need not be paid and
great care is needed in handling such requests. Once payment is made
it is too late – no repayment claim will be entertained. We can
advise on the correct handling of such requests.
Another
recent change - intermediaries
If you are an intermediary and affected by the colloquially named
‘IR35’ rules, you will be glad to know that the concession that
applied last year has been extended indefinitely. So there will be
no penalty imposed if you did not submit a complete and accurate
2001/02 P35 by 19 May, provided it is finalised and submitted by 31
January 2003. A provisional calculation should have been made to
enable an estimated payment to be made by 19 April and interest will
run until the correct payment is made – the concession relates
only to penalties, and even then will not apply in the case of
fraud, etc.
End of year procedures are becoming
increasingly complex. If you would like to discuss any of the issues
raised in this bulletin, or any wider areas of concern, please get
in touch.
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