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Ive been told by my accountant that i can claim 40p a mile but nothing else. Doesn't seem right to me . Would love a second opinion.
Alan
The government are screwing us no matter what.
Believe it or not they have actually dropped the "advisory fuel rates" that a company should pay its employee with a private car in certain instances.
Where can I get petrol at 1.30 per gallon?I get 13p per mile from the company
That is so far out of date it's a joke. I rough terms that equates to 1/10th of a gallon per mile.
We get 40p/mile for the 1st 10,000 miles, then 25p/mile for anything above that in each tax year. I think this is a standard Inland Revenue figure - I'm sure your employers will be able to confirm this. As for claiming anything else, a colleague of mine tried it, and opened a can of worms. Some people get lucky, other less so if they decide to examine your claim and ask for proof, documentation and receipts. I think for the small amounts of extras you might try to get, the effort and risk really isn't worth it.
got 2 jobs. Employee and self employed.
I tot up total cost of motoring in 1 year then split it according to % self employed use and % other.
I claim the % self employed off as a business expense and my accountant says that is kosher.
Total motoring cost includes depreciation/tax/insurance/fuel/servicing/parts - in fact everything.
For me that works better than the 40pp mile
Those rates are correct. The previous Government considered dropping the rate to 25p across the board but backed of due to NHS staff kicking off about it.
As for claiming additional costs, you can't do that - the rates are meant to cover everything. In most companies (but not employers like NHS) regular car users would get a fixed monthly allowance too.
This is correct the - 40p per mile (or less - depends on your employer) should compensate you for ALL car-related costs, i.e. fuel, servicing, VED, MOT, depreciation, insurance, etc etc... so once you claim the mileage allowance for your private car you can not claim anything else in connection with that car.
However.... you can claim expenses relating to your journey, and not to the car, i.e. Congestion Charge (in London), parking, and toll-roads. There is no limit how much you can claim for these, as long as it can be demonstrated that they are reasonable and relate to your business journeys.
What you can't do though, is claim anything - i.e. neither mileage not CC/parking/tolls, for trips to or from your fixed place of work. So no parking receipts from outside the office...
It is therefore a good idea to keep an accurate log of your travels for which you claim business miles (and other expenses), in case the taxman shows interest. In general, these have to be trips done solely and wholly for the purpose of generating income for your business - e.g. travelling to see customers or suppliers, or carry on-site work away from the office.
Hope this helps....
Hmmm...I'm not sure how it works if you're self-employed, but if the company pays for the car, then doesn't it become a company car on which you should pay benefit-in-kind tax?
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