Did your wife previously expense the service items that were registered in her/your name? Not read the thread thoroughly so forgive me if I have missed this.
If not this might have more to do with HMRC than her employer. I've had the same issue with my company whereby I can no longer expense any service I use at home in support of work if that service is not in my employers name. In order to make it expensable, my employer would have to put their name on the bill for my landline/internet connection.
What's it say they'll provide in her contract? Is it a contractual change?
I see your problem then. When I work for clients in London, it costs me a bloody fortune in carrier pigeons!!
[url= https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IP_over_Avian_Carriers ]RFC 1149[/url].
Previous gig, all phone calls and internet covered. Current gig, nothing and (provided own PC - which was sat there doing nothing in any case). The firm saves a shedload by you not working in an office too btw, it's not entirely one-sided.
Log her time on the internet for work, pro rata that time against your bill, pop it into her expenses. Just because you have it doesn't mean you should give it away for free.
Years ago at a firm I worked for the FD said that we shouldn't be paying for home internet connections (even where we needed it) as HMRC could see it as BIK.
This - I work for a very large multinational and we've gone to this model. Essentially its too difficult to define the benefit of paying for the line, so its just assumed now you supply it. Phone calls on mobile or over VPN don't cost me anything. We used to have to provide a seperate busines line, with its own ADSL which was just nuts.
Not being funny but if the job conditions are reasonable otherwise I'd hardly see it as something to strike about.
haha 😆binners - Member
I can understand you being a bit miffed. If I didn't need broadband for working from home, then I wouldn't bother with it. I can't see me, the missus, or the kids having any use for it at all. I'm sure you're the same. So why should you have to pay for it? Its really, really expensive too nowadays.Seems pretty unfair to me. I'd kick off then leave.
[i]yet if you were self employed working from home you'd be entitled to offset energy bills and other costs directly related to your work against tax? [/i]
Urban myth. We were advised a few years ago by our Accountancy Co. that anything more than £1 per week would be seen 'badly' by HMRC.
[i]It's not wrong to have benefits in kind; you just have to pay tax on them. The employer would provide a P11D for benefits in kind and the FD of the firm you worked for should be well aware of that. [/i]
Of course he was, and didn't want us to waste company time with it. So I just gave a bit extra at the annual review to all affected. Far better, and pensionable 🙂
Even HMRCs own examples talk about more than £1 per week as a small amount and not needing further enquiries.
http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/manuals/bimmanual/bim47825.htm
Edit: nice and easy guideline:
http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/manuals/bimmanual/bim75010.htm
I think the recommended wfh allowance is a couple of hundred a year.
Our accountant told us to take it.
There's a fixed amount from HMRC for working at home to cover utilities etc.
£3/week IIRC - so £1.20 if on higher rate
Saying that, I'm on the same gig now so just tether my phone
It's not wrong to have benefits in kind; you just have to pay tax on them. The employer would provide a P11D for benefits in kind and the FD of the firm you worked for should be well aware of that.
right - id rather pay tax on a fifty quid BIK than have to pay fifty quid myself!
ninfans link to the HMRC's own website seems to contradict that and thisThere's a fixed amount from HMRC for working at home to cover utilities etc.
Urban myth. We were advised a few years ago by our Accountancy Co. that anything more than £1 per week would be seen 'badly' by HMRC.
There's a fixed amount from HMRC for working at home to cover utilities etc.
ninfans link to the HMRC's own website seems to contradict that and this
Urban myth. We were advised a few years ago by our Accountancy Co. that anything more than £1 per week would be seen 'badly' by HMRC.
Now £4 according to this, it was £3 last time I claimed it
http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/manuals/eimanual/eim32815.htm
Yes, but that is an optional simple way to claim. You can still claim for the actual costs and there is no limit on that as long as you can justify it.Now £4 according to this, it was £3 last time I claimed it
Never mind the Internet, I work from home (I supply the broadband) and I'm missing out big time over my office colleagues in London.
What about the biscuits!?!
They're free to all in our office... It's like a biscuit nirvana. Yet I don't get a biscuit subsidy for working at home. I need to get my voice heard and get representation from the top to fight for my right for biscuits. I'm going to tweet Mr Farage
I work fully remote, and the company pay for laptop, monitor, desk, chair, and co-working space if I want to work somewhere else for a change.
They don't pay for broadband or biscuits.
You can claim the VAT back on them as a business expense. I'm unsure of where you stand on the subsequent structural damage to the building.
HMRC guidance states that bookshelf speakers are ok but not floorstanders or sub-woofers. Check current case law for speaker stands.
No chair so that you can throw shapes more effectively gofasterstripes?
Wonder how many people taking the piss are self employed and claim the VAT back on things like broadband, even though they have broadband in the house anyway.
I'm unsure of where you stand on the subsequent structural damage to the building.
Have you seen my sub? It makes those seem rather, umm, small. It's 170*45*45 tranmission line...
Some plaster appears to have fallen off the wall. Luckily [for the other residents] I tend to only use it in the middle of the day, when they're all out [off off work with a migraine].
Wonder how many people taking the piss are self employed and claim the VAT back on things like broadband, even though they have broadband in the house anyway.
One of my mates got the VAT back on his new kitchen, as a business expense. I thought that was pushing the boundaries, but his attitude was '**** it! I put everything through. If they pull me up for it, then I'll pay it'. They didn't.
Wonder how many people taking the piss are self employed and claim the VAT back on things like broadband, even though they have broadband in the house anyway.
*waves*
Although I had my business before broadband existed (I needed an ISDN line back then for clients to access data) - chicken meet egg.
do you claim VAT back for a proportion of your leccy too? 🙂
Wonder how many people taking the piss are self employed and claim the VAT back on things like broadband, even though they have broadband in the house anyway.
I claim 50% of the broadband cost as a business expense, why wouldn't I? It is a genuine business expense.
I claim 50% of the broadband cost as a business expense, why wouldn't I? It is a genuine business expense.
I haven't got a problem with that.
But by the same token, the OP has a legitimate gripe no?
I wonder how many people taking the piss are fully employed and don't assume that the tax man is making efficient use of all the allowances/expenses they are entitled to....
There are forms for this exact reason:
[url= https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/income-tax-tax-relief-for-expenses-of-employment-p87 ]HMRC P87[/url]
This is the step before HMRC Tax Self-Assesment.
Assumption is the mother of all ^&%$ups.
Scar
Our company withdrew work internet access ages ago. In my old place I had 3 BT boxes, one each for me and the wife and one for home broadband.
The technology allows us just to use the home connection quickly and securly so seems churlish to try and claim it back!?
The "Working from home" unless defined in the job specification and a requirement for the role, is seen as a shared benefit with zero overhead for most businesses.
There are some companies that provide a WFH allowance, which is HMRC linked. Most however do not, as the administration cost of doing this would be higher than the amounts involved, so reduce the shared benefit to near zero.
(my company included)
This is where the P87 comes in.
You can claim to the letter of the HMRC allowances, rather than be restricted to what your company deems "benefitial" or "worthwhile" to it's employees.
Scar
But by the same token, the OP has a legitimate gripe no?
Absolutely, I think the company are taking the piss.
[edit] Although it appears that the P87 form linked to above would help the OP's wife claim back the money she would otherwise be losing so maybe they're not taking the pee as much as i thought.
But by the same token, the OP has a legitimate gripe no?
I think they've got a very legitimate gripe, which is why I posted the link to stuff about custom and practice terms and conditions of employment. Foisting this on someone as a means to cut expenses could certainly amount to a big deal, depending how many others were affected,
[i]This is where the P87 comes in.
You can claim to the letter of the HMRC allowances, rather than be restricted to what your company deems "benefitial" or "worthwhile" to it's employees.[/i]
This, and for most folk it'll be pennies unless they do loads of business miles and their company pays under the allowances.
This, and for most folk it'll be pennies unless they do loads of business miles and their company pays under the allowances.
When I used to do loads of business miles the money I got back from the tax man was well worth claiming. So much so that after 2 or 3 years of HMRC giving me back nearly 4 figure sums they started asking me to do full tax returns instead. They still owed me money. It's well worth learning about what you can and can't legitimately claim.
As for the example of claiming back VAT on a new kitchen, it just goes to show how each or our moral compasses are aligned very differently 😕



