Contractors can take reasonable home business deductions

IR35 Test

Recently, HM Revenue & Customs made it easier for contractors to take deductions on expenses related to running an office at home. The Business Information Manual section 37600 which deals with this subject was updated at the end of December, 2006—must have been the Revenue’s quiet Christmas present.

''If you really use part of your home for business then you can take a good deal of home-business expenses off your taxes; you don’t have to use your entire home just for business, just part of it'' explains David Colom, a principal at the London-based accounting firm DJ Colom & Co. which specialises in contractor affairs. ''Just dedicate a single room to your business, and actually use it to do your business during most regular business hours (as opposed to using it once in a while to read a spreadsheet). The Revenue will accept all of the business-related expenses that stem from that usage.''

Costs May Vary

As Colom points out, costs may vary. ''A room in a house in Knightsbridge in London will obviously cost more to maintain than one in East Anglia.'' Nor is that something the Revenue will have any difficulty understanding.

If you really use part of your home for business then you can take a good deal of home business expenses off your taxes

David Colom-DJ Colom & Co.

What the courts have ruled is that using a home part of the time for business is just like using a car part of the time, and apportioning expenses for it shouldn’t be much different. For example, if you only have a one-room apartment, calculate the floor space you use for the business and determine what percentage that is of the whole.

Be Reasonable

But be reasonable: don’t claim that your hobby making jewellery at home is a business use when you make your living as an IT contractor. “A common sense approach is best here,” Colom adds.

According to the manual, expenses of running a home-based business are broadly divided into two categories - running costs and fixed costs.

The factors to be taken into account, according to the BIM section, when apportioning an expense include: Area: what proportion in terms of area of the home is used for business purposes? Usage: how much is consumed? This is appropriate where there is a metered or measurable supply such as electricity, gas or water? Time: how long is it used for business.

Telephone Charges Too

Telephone charges and line rental on a domestic phone, a proportion of exterior house repairs, even a proportion of your home cleaning bill are permitted deductions. Also an appropriate portion of mortgage and rental payments.

A common sense approach is best here

David Colom-DJ Colom & Co.

Here is an example from the Manual. Bill runs a small business. He uses one small room at home as an office, exclusively for the purposes of his trade (CG64660). The room represents 5% of the floor area of the house. His Council Tax, insurance and mortgage interest bills total £4500. He claims 5%, £225. His electricity bill for heating & lighting is £300. He claims £15, which is 5% of the total. His total claim is £240 (plus the business proportion of his phone bill).

Although Bill has apportioned his electricity bill by floor area rather than usage, the amount claimed is small and there is nothing to suggest that his business use is significantly greater or lesser than his private use. It can be accepted as a reasonable estimate.

   
David Colom

David Colom

Principal

D J Colom & Co Chartered Accountants

David Colom qualified as a Chartered Accountant in the City of London in 1981 and is the founder and principal of D J Colom & Co Chartered Accountants established in 1989.

Started specialising in serving IT contractors in 1993 and is now one of the longest standing suoppliers of accountancy services to computer contractors. Read Full Profile...

View all our experts

   

As Colom points out, these manuals are only used for the Revenue’s interpretation; you cannot rely on them in court. Still the change to the manuals does indicate that the HMRC will take a broader line with home expense deductions in the future.

Published: Wednesday, February 21, 2007

© 2012 All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. Please see our copyright notice. If you want to use any content you have seen on this site then please request our media pack and ask for details of our Content Licencing Service.


Readers Comments...


  
Bookmark and Share
  
     
  

Latest Site Updates

Does HMRC even know where its ‘better administration of IR35’ target is? Does HMRC even know where its ‘better administration of IR35’ target is?

If contractors agree to trial HMRC’s new IR35 framework for 12 months, how are we going to measure if ‘better administration’ has been achieved?

ContractorCalculator: Contracting news in brief - 18/May/2012 ContractorCalculator: Contracting news in brief - 18/May/2012

News this week includes the latest IR35 insights; P35 advice; contractor demand data; partial financial sector recovery; & HMRC service improvements.

P35 guidance: unsure contractors should answer ‘no’ to service co question, says HMRC P35 guidance: unsure contractors should answer ‘no’ to service co question, says HMRC

Contractors are not legally obliged to answer the P35 question 6, ‘Are you a Service Company?’, and if they’re unsure should answer ‘no’.

No certainty from HMRC’s new IR35 framework, but the policy debate must be sustained No certainty from HMRC’s new IR35 framework, but the policy debate must be sustained

No certainty for limited company contractors yet, but the policy debate is far from over, say OTS Tax Director John Whiting and PCG’s Simon McVicker.


  
  

Twitter

  • Does HMRC even know where its ‘better administration of IR35’ target is? http://t.co/L3MuqlFz

    8 hours ago

  • IT leads surge in Scottish contract recruitment : Bank of Scotland Report on Jobs http://t.co/QIrLKFGb

    8 hours ago

  • How might government's 'secret plan' to link civil service earnings to location affect public sector contractor rates? http://t.co/fJClb0HG

    Sun, 20 May 2012

  • IT contractors have a key enabling role to play in the UK retail sector's 'third revolution' http://t.co/zjx00EfY via @MT_editorial

    Fri, 18 May 2012

  • ContractorCalculator: Contracting news in brief - 18/May/2012 http://t.co/SDkQNjdZ

    Fri, 18 May 2012

  • Uncertainty over Scottish independence 'harmful to Scotland plc' impacting on oil & gas decisions http://t.co/ZKo2jCsQ via @scotsmannews

    Fri, 18 May 2012

Follow Us On Twitter


  
     

  
  

Contractor solutions

Contractors Handbook AM Limited IR35 Test
  
Contractor accountants - pricing checklist
  

Contractor solutions

Parasol Group

Umbrella or Limited? Guidance on best options, and take home pay.

Choice Premier Pay+

Take home up to 85% of your pay. IR35 solution.

Contractors Handbook

The expert guide for UK contractors and freelancers

InTouch Accounting

Person to person contractor accountant. Free IR35 review.

Bedouin Group

No more IR35. Retain up to 85% of your earnings.

NA D J Colom Accountants Bedouin Group Contractor Financials NewsNow
  
Elevate

  

The UK's leading contractor site. Independently audited traffic (ABC) – 156,346 monthly unique visitors.