Budget 2009 - Temporary first year allowances for plant and machinery

The Budget has seen the temporary re-introduction of first year allowances (FYAs) for purchases of qualifying plant and machinery. Allowances of 40% will be available to companies, partnerships and individuals carrying on qualifying activities (which includes trades and ‘normal’ property businesses) in excess of the annual investment allowance (see below) subject to the following:

  • the expenditure must be incurred in the year to 31 March 2010 (for companies) and 5 April 2010 (partnerships and individuals).
  • must not relate to specific proscribed assets, including for example, long life assets, cars and assets for leasing.

Unusually, there appears to be no restriction on the amount of the expenditure or the size of business incurring the costs.

The annual investment allowance (AIA), introduced last year, allows businesses (or groups, where related businesses carry on similar activities) to claim a 100% deduction from taxable profits for £50,000 of expenditure on eligible plant and machinery. 

Confusingly, the definition of eligible plant and machinery for AIA purposes differs quite significantly from that for qualifying plant and machinery for FYAs.

Comment on this blog in the space provided below, or visit my profile for details of how to contact me.

David Mansell is a Corporate Tax Partner at Mercer & Hole.

The Annual Investment Allowance - the story so far ...

The ‘annual investment allowance’ (AIA) was introduced from April 2008 (1 April for corporation tax and 6 April for income tax) to provide a 100% allowance on the first £50,000 of expenditure on plant and machinery (other than cars). It replaced the first-year allowances regime for small and medium-sized enterprises. 

What lessons can be learned so far? 

The real problem is that for accounting periods straddling April the position is complicated! The key issues are:

1.      When was the expenditure incurred?

2.      What amount of AIA is available on a time basis?

3.      Against which assets should the AIA be claimed?

4.      What about the interaction with short-life assets?

Is it equitable that identical transactions can be taxed very differently according not only to the date expenditure is incurred but also because of different accounting dates?

Capital Allowances - the new Annual Investment Allowance

The Government has recently published its response to consultations on changes to the way in which relief will be given for expenditure on plant and machinery.

This is just a brief reminder of the anomalies in 2008 of the new ‘annual investment allowance’ (AIA). This will be introduced in April to provide for a 100% allowance on the first £50,000 of expenditure on plant and machinery (other than cars) and replace the existing first-year allowances for small and medium-sized enterprises.

The AIA will apply to expenditure incurred on or after 1 April 2008 for corporation tax (6 April 2008 for income tax). The same dates see the abolition of first year allowances. Where an accounting period overlaps the implementation dates the maximum AIA will be restricted according to the proportion of the period falling after the relevant date. This will give some strange results in the coming months.

As an example:

A business with a 30 April year end plans to buy plant costing £50,000. If it buys in March it will qualify for a first year allowance (FYA) of 50% = £25,000. The same acquisition in May (the first month of the next accounting period) will attract the full AIA = £50,000. The real problem is if the same acquisition were to be made in April when it would attract no FYA, the AIA will be restricted to one twelfth of the annual amount (£4,167) and the excess will attract a reduced writing down allowance of 24.58%, giving a total deduction of only £15,433.

Identical transactions will be taxed differently according to the date expenditure is incurred and the accounting date chosen!

Careful planning is very important.

Capital Allowances - Draft Legislation Published (AT LAST!)

In his Spring 2007 Budget, the Chancellor (who at that point was still Gordon Brown) announced changes to the capital allowances regime, without giving more than the most rudimentary detail.

A lengthy consultation period followed and it is only now that HM Revenue & Customs have published draft legislation. The document runs to 91 pages(!) with the most important changes being:

Rates of allowance

The regime of first year allowances for small and medium sized business is to go and be replaced by a series of other allowances:

  • annual investment allowance – £50,000 of expenditure written off immediately; 
  •  “integral features” – annual allowances at 10%; a new concept that gives relief not only to certain items not previously allowed (eg energy saving awnings) but also includes items such as air conditioning and heating, that previously qualified as plant (on which allowances were available at 25%); 
  • long life assets (broadly those with an expected life of more than 20 years) - rate of allowances increases from 6% to 10%; 
  •  other plant and machinery – annual allowances fall from 25% to 20%; 
  • industrial and agricultural buildings allowances – being phased out by 2011; and 
  • enterprise zones – the present 100% allowance ceases in 2011.

Some of these are considered in more detail below.

Annual investment allowance

The 100% relief on £50,000 of expenditure will be available to all businesses, from April 2008. The allowance will be split between group companies or businesses under the control of the same person/people. It can be used against most items of allowable capital expenditure (the exceptions to this include cars) in whatever order or proportion the taxpayer decides.

Businesses with relatively small capital expenditure programmes may decide that it is better to wait until after the changes come into effect before spending money on plant and machinery; for larger, or more capital intensive, businesses, this change alone is unlikely to be significant.

Integral features

One of the most commonly missed tax reliefs has been the opportunity for businesses to claim relief for expenditure on tax allowable fixtures that form part of the ‘fabric’ of a building (for example air conditioning). From this Spring, the savings available to businesses will change significantly, as the items on which relief is due have been extended but the rate of relief falls from 25% to 10%. HMRC have also published a list of items that qualify for this relief – this includes electrical, water, heating and cooling systems.

Anyone who thinks that they may have incurred costs that might qualify for these allowances should review the position as soon as they can, as the reduction in the allowance could have a significant impact on both tax liabilities and cash flow.

Planning opportunities

With the abolition of first year allowances on expenditure above £50,000 and the reduction in capital allowance rates, businesses should look carefully at whether bringing forward capital expenditure might accelerate the rate at which they can claim allowances. Whilst the same amount of allowances will normally be claimed over time, the timing differences can be significant.

It is important to look at costs already incurred and see if they should be reallocated – for example, away from building fabric (no allowances after 2011) to plant (allowances available at 20%) and to consider the life of assets; short life asset claims may well be an important way to bring forward relief in the year in which assets are scrapped or sold.

You will appreciate that the above is only a general, basic, summary and detailed advice should be sought before any planning is undertaken. As with most things coming out of HMRC the devil is in the detail and further work will invariably be needed to confirm the best course of action in any given situation.

That said, if you think you might be affected by the new rules and would like to discuss what you can (or perhaps should) do before April please contact Cathy Corns or me.