Tax on employer provided assets and computers

Qdos Consulting

Introduction

Many contractors purchase computers through their company and use them at home for both business and personal use.

This article explains the tax issues relating to employer provided assets, including computers.

Calculating the “benefit in kind” of an asset

Where a company provides an employee with the use of an asset other than a car, van or living accommodation, the cash equivalent of the benefit is 20% of the market value of the asset at the time of its first availability to the employee, plus the full amount of any running costs incurred in providing the asset.

The cash equivalent (or benefit in kind) is reduced proportionately where there is part business use of the asset and is also reduced on a pro rata basis if the asset is only provided for part of a tax year.

Transferring company assets to employees

If the company transfers ownership of the asset to the employee, then the employee would be charged to tax at that time on the higher of:

  • the market value of the asset at the time of the transfer or;
  • the market value at the time the asset was originally made available to the employee, less the total amounts charged on the employee as benefits in kind for the use of the asset

Rules for computers

Where the asset is a computer, the benefit is calculated exactly the same as above but a £500 computer exemption applies to any amount chargeable.

This exemption does not apply where the equipment is only available to directors or if the equipment is made available to directors on more favourable terms than to other employees.

Computer equipment includes printers, scanners, modems, discs and other peripheral devices connected to and inserted into the computer and also relevant software. The use of a telephone with a modem however, will give rise to a separate benefit in kind.

Example:

A company supplies an employee with a computer which costs £4k. In addition, the company takes out an insurance and maintenance contract for an annual cost of £350. The computer is used 80% for business purposes.

The calculation will be as follows:

Cost - £4,000 @ 20% = £800

Annual running costs = £350

Benefit = £1,150.

After deducting the computer exemption of £500, leaves a taxable benefit of £650.

The employee claims an 80% business use deduction, so pays tax on £650 x 20% = £130.

Even if they are a higher rate tax payer paying 40%, they still get a £4k computer with the insurance and maintenance contract, for a tax bill of £52 per year!

Practicalities for contractors

For many contractors the private use is likely to be negligible, so the benefit in kind will probably be less than the £500 allowance.

Where the contractor is a one man Limited Company, a tax inspector could argue in theory that the computer is provided solely for the director, and therefore the £500 allowance does not apply. In practice this argument is never put forward.

In the unlikely event of this argument from an over zealous tax inspector, one could argue that all company employees, whether a director or not, are entitled to have a computer at home. The fact that the company in question happens to be a one person company, does not contradict with the wording of the law. A fall-back argument would be that the "business", as opposed to the "employee", needs a computer to carry out it's work and that any personal use is incidental.

   
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

   

The legislation does not specify whether it makes any difference that the computer is a laptop or not. In the event of a HMRC query, it would be preferable to be considering a laptop, since that is indicative of using the computer on contract sites.

Published: Wednesday, May 18, 2005

© 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

The tax avoidance arms race is MAD: mitigation, avoidance and disclosure The tax avoidance arms race is MAD: mitigation, avoidance and disclosure

The tax mitigation arms race between HMRC and tax advisors leads to a never-ending cycle of mitigation, avoidance and disclosure, says David Colom.

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’.


  
  

Twitter

  • Will the new Enterprise Research Centre dedicated to SMEs recognise the role of contracting businesses in the economy? http://t.co/ACE31fIm

    18 hours ago

  • HMRC defends it tax gap calculations claiming external estimates are misleading http://t.co/7RWvC7bq via @AccountancyAge

    19 hours ago

  • The tax avoidance arms race is MAD: mitigation, avoidance and disclosure http://t.co/9q1WMPjD

    22 hours ago

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

    Mon, 21 May 2012

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

    Mon, 21 May 2012

  • 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

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.

Contractors Handbook

The expert guide for UK contractors and freelancers

Bedouin Group

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

InTouch Accounting

Person to person contractor accountant. Free IR35 review.

Choice Premier Pay+

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

NA Bedouin Group D J Colom Accountants Contractor Financials NewsNow
  
Elevate

  

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