Scotmitchy
Senior Member
- Location
- Scotland
I have just had my first monthly bill in, and, to be honest, the tax break is minimal. Having thought I might save up to 40 per cent, I think it might be nearer 10 per cent 

Sorry if I came agross that strong.I didn't say that you had made a mistake. I was adding to your contribution, not correcting it.![]()
Intresting. Our org are looking to bin cyclescheme maybe by the time the new company come on board our limit will be £2k over 3 years too
I have just had my first monthly bill in, and, to be honest, the tax break is minimal. Having thought I might save up to 40 per cent, I think it might be nearer 10 per cent![]()
This residual value lark....
If you have bought a bike say for £1k, but remove VAT, tax etc you are paying only £500 which across 12 months is £42 per month how does the residual value work - surely you have paid the whole lot off )albeit with some hefty tax savings)?
Is the residual value only for those people who aren't paying the full £500?
Would a £2k bike get you to work better than a £1k bike? I think it probably would, although not twice as well but the law of diminishing returns sets in at around £200-£300 (IMO) for road bikes.Is it just me who thinks that this is a bit much? A £1k bike will get you to work just as well as a £2k one (my £250 bike does the job), so why should you get a tax break on that extra £1k which is funding a luxury purchase?
I realise that I'm saying this to the wrong people.
that is a lot of money for a bike to ride to work on
oh yeah
Do you work with Tim?
Or in the same industry?
Or for an employer that has a consumer credit licence?
If not, I strongly suggest you actually read the thread before we have any more misinformation spread.