could HMRC be mean enough to go back over the last few years and start recalculating tax positions based on C2W benefits?
Fine by me![]()
*childishly rubs hands together in anticipation*
I'm already sorting out a cart, pulled by a cargo bike of course, so that I can do the rounds like some sort of cycling rag and bone man. I can hear the cries now:-
'any newish bikes, help pay your tax bill, any newish bikes'
no density involved. If they don't charge you the 25% (assuming tip top nick, and tbh how many year-old £1k rrp bikes get sold on eBay for less than £250? so that seems real to me) they have created a taxable "benefit in kind".
On the first part, yes, they could. However, with the time it's going to take to resolve the issues which have been all over the news recently, they are not planning on doing anything else currently.could HMRC be mean enough to go back over the last few years and start recalculating tax positions based on C2W benefits?
Having never done the scheme, do they even appear on the P11D?
I run my own business and am VAT registered so I could have theoretically got my last couple of bikes through C2W (even though I don't!). But it was just too much hassle.
After three years, a £500 bike's fair market value is 12% of the original price, falling to 2% after five years, says HMRC.
Really? A 3 yr old bike mid-spec bike for £60? I'll visit that shop. Especially if they have a 5yr old one for a tenner.
Another person who should keep their scheme's rules quiet, as that would mean that scheme is non-compliant. There must be no mention of a final purchase price. If the final price is set at the start of the contract, that makes it a hire purchase rather than a rental contract.Hmmm.
I'll be interested to see where I stand, as our scheme explicitely mentioned a 5% final charge, and I had the bike stolen anyway.
Hmmm.
I'll be interested to see where I stand, as our scheme explicitely mentioned a 5% final charge, and I had the bike stolen anyway.