I'm with 2Loose on this. I've just had a response from my employer to the e-mail below saying that they were contractually obliged to hand the bike over to Cyclescheme at the end of the lease period - which I actually find hard to believe.
I would definitely recommend that you encourage your company to deal directly with bike shops and run the scheme for themselves rather than go through a third-party provider like Cyclescheme. They've been chasing me for a decision and I guess I'm just going to have to fork out the £70.
Having bought a bike through the bike-to-work scheme a year ago, I’ve had an e-mail from Cyclescheme giving me three options for dealing with the bike at the end of the hire period. I have some concerns about what is being offered and would like to explore the options that have not been offered, but should be available to me.
Before going into the details of my concerns, I’ll run through the process as it has worked so far :
- User selects a bike and gets a quote from the bike shop
- MyEmployer process the quote – pay Cyclescheme
- Cyclescheme issues the voucher, user collects the bike, which is now owned by MyEmployer and leased to the user.
- User pays MyEmployer a monthly rental via salary sacrifice over the next year.
By the end of the year, MyEmployer has recovered the full cost of the bike from the user plus MyEmployer has saved 12% of the user’s payments in reduced NI payments on the user’s salary. User has saved tax and NI deductions on the salary sacrificed.
Now, at the end of the year, MyEmployer has passed ownership of the bike to Cyclescheme and they have offered the user the choice of
- Pay 7% of the initial cost of the bike to rent the bike from Cyclescheme for the next three years, with the bike remaining the property of Cyclescheme OR
- User pays Cyclescheme the ‘fair market value’ of the bike (25% of the initial cost if over £500) OR
- Return the bike to Cyclescheme at the user’s cost
My concerns about this are as follows:
- The bike is an asset owned by MyEmployer which has a market value which MyEmployer has simply passed on to Cyclescheme at no cost and which Cyclescheme will benefit from, with only a small amount of admin cost to be covered.
- The user has not been given the option of being given ownership of the bike, and paying tax on the benefit – which would actually be cheaper for the user than leasing the bike from Cyclescheme. Under this option, the benefit would go to the government in the form of the tax revenue.
- The user has not been given the option of leasing the bike directly from MyEmployer. A new lease agreement at reduced cost would bring further income in to MyEmployer from the asset over a period during which the market value would be further reduced.
- The user has not been given the option of buying the bike directly from MyEmployer and therefore benefitting MyEmployer very directly.
- In my own case, having commuted by bike over 3000 miles in the last year, I have spent in excess of £200 in replacing worn parts – chains, cogs, tyres, brake blocks, cables etc – and also considerable time in maintaining the bike in good condition, I have made a significant contribution to the current market value of the bike I obtained through the scheme, yet it appears that this contribution will end up benefiting Cyclescheme.
I feel that there should have been some discussion with me before the end of my lease to determine what the best options would be for me and for MyEmployer at the end of my lease period. I don’t know what is in the contract between MyEmployer and Cyclescheme, but I would hope that there is no contractual obligation on MyEmployer to hand ownership of the bike over to Cyclescheme and that there are options available other than those offered by Cyclescheme, which could still be considered.