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    Chartered Accountants
    + registered auditors
    Chariot House
    • Income tax
    • High Income Child Benefit Charge
    • Pensions
    • Annual investment limits
    • National Insurance Contributions
    • Vehicle Benefits
    • Tax-free mileage allowances
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    • Corporation tax
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    2022/23 tax rates

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    • 2022/23 tax rates

    2022/23 tax rates

    Autumn budget

    Income tax

    Allowances 2022/23 2021/22
    Personal Allowance (PA) * £12,570 £12,570
    Marriage Allowance†  1,260  1,260
    Blind Person’s Allowance 2,600 2,520
    Rent a room relief ** 7,500 7,500
    Trading income ** 1,000 1,000
    Property income ** 1,000 1,000

     

    * PA is withdrawn at £1 for every £2 by which ‘adjusted income’ exceeds £100,000. There is no allowance given above £125,140.

    † The part of the PA that is transferable to a spouse or civil partner who is not a higher or additional rate taxpayer.

    ** If gross income exceeds it, the limit may be deducted instead of actual expenses.

     

    Rate bands 2022/23 2021/22
    Basic rate band (BRB) £37,700 £37,700
    Higher Rate Band (HRB) 37,701 – 150,000 37,701 – 150,000
    Additional rate over 150,000 over 150,000
    Personal Savings Allowance (PSA)
    – Basic rate taxpayer 1,000 1,000
    – Higher rate taxpayer 500 500
    Dividend Allowance (DA) 2,000 2,000

     

    BRB and additional rate threshold are increased by personal pension contributions (up to permitted limit) and Gift Aid donations.

     

    Tax rates 2022/23 2022/23
    Rates differ for General, Savings and Dividend income within each band: G S D G S D
    Basic 20% 20% 7.5% 20% 20% 7.5%
    Higher 40% 40% 32.5% 40% 40% 32.5%
    Additional 45% 45% 38.1% 45% 45% 38.1%

     

    General income (salary, pensions, business profits, rent) usually uses personal allowance, basic rate and higher rate bands before savings income (interest). Scottish taxpayers are taxed at different rates on general income (see below).

    To the extent that savings income falls in the first £5,000 of the basic rate band, it is taxed at nil rather than 20%.

    The PSA taxes interest at nil, where it would otherwise be taxable at 20% or 40%.

    Dividends are normally taxed as the ‘top slice’ of income. The DA taxes the first £2,000 of dividend income at nil, rather than the rate that would otherwise apply.

     

    Income tax – Scotland 2021/22 2020/21
    Starter Rate 19% £2,097 £2,097
    Basic Rate 20% 2,098 – 12,726 2,098 – 12,726
    Intermediate Rate 21% 12,727 – 31,092 12,727 – 31,092
    Higher Rate 41% 31,093 – 150,000 31,093 – 150,000
    Top Rate 46% over 150,000 over 150,000

     

    The Scottish rates and bands do not apply for savings and dividend income, which are taxed at normal UK rates. The Scottish rates for 2022/23 have not yet been announced.

    High Income Child Benefit Charge (HICBC)

    1% of child benefit for each £100 of adjusted net income between £50,000 and £60,000.

    Remittance basis charge 2022/23 2021/22
    For non-UK domiciled individuals who have been UK resident in at least:
    7 of the preceding 9 tax years £30,000 £30,000
    12 of the preceding 14 tax years 60,000 60,000
    15 of the preceding 20 tax years Deemed to be UK domiciled

    Pensions

    Registered Pensions 2022/23 2021/22
    Lifetime allowance (LA) £1,073,100 £1,073,100
    Annual allowance (AA)* 40,000 40,000

     

    Annual relievable pension inputs are the higher of earnings (capped at AA) or £3,600.

    *Usually tapered down, to a minimum of £4,000, when adjusted income exceeds £240,000.

     

    State pension (per week) 2022/23 2021/22
    Old state pension £141.85 £137.60
    New state pension† 185.15 179.60

     

    †Applies to those reaching state retirement age after 5 April 2016.

    Annual investment limits

    2022/23 2021/22
    Individual Savings Account (ISA)
    – Overall limit £20,000 £20,000
    – Lifetime ISA 4,000 4,000
    Junior ISA 9,000 9,000
    EIS – 30% relief 2,000,000 2,000,000
    Seed EIS (SEIS) – 50% relief 100,000 100,000
    Venture Capital Trust (VCT) – 30% relief 200,000 200,000

     

    National Insurance Contributions

    Class 1 (Employees)

    Employee Employer
    Main NIC rate 13.25% 15.05%
    No NIC on first £190pw £175pw
    Main rate* charged up to £967pw no limit
    2% rate on earnings above £967pw N/A
    Employment allowance per qualifying business** N/A £4,000

     

    *Nil rate of employer NIC on earnings up to £967pw for employees aged under 21, apprentices aged under 25 and ex-armed forces personnel in their first twelve months of civilian employment.

    **Some businesses do not qualify, including certain sole director companies and employers who have an employer’s Class 1 NIC liability of £100,000 or more for 2021/22.

    Employer contributions (at 15.05%) are also due on most taxable benefits (Class 1A) and on tax paid on an employee’s behalf under a PAYE settlement agreement (Class 1B).

    Class 2 (Self-employed)

    Flat rate per week £3.15
    Small profits threshold £6,725

    Class 3 (Voluntary)

    Flat rate per week £15.85

    Class 4 (Self-employed)

    On profits £9,500 – £50,270 10.25%
    On profits over £50,270 3.25%

    Vehicle benefits

    Cars

    Taxable benefit: List price of car multiplied by chargeable percentage.

    2022/23 2021/22 percentage for petrol cars first registered
    CO2
    g/km
    Electric range
    Miles
    All cars
    %
    Pre 06.04.2020
    %
    Post 05.04.2020
    %
    0 N/A 1 2 1
    1-50 >130 2 2 1
    1-50 70 – 129 5 5 4
    1-50 40 – 69 8 8 7
    1-50 30 – 39 12 12 11
    1-50 <30 14 14 13
    51-54 N/A 15 15 14

     

    Then a further 1% for each 5g/km CO2 emissions, up to a maximum of 37%.

    Diesel cars that are not RDE2 standard suffer a 4% supplement on the above figures but are still capped at 37%.

    Vans

    Chargeable value of £3,600 (2021/22: £3,500) if private use is more than home-to-work. Zero-emission vans charged at £Nil (2021/22: £Nil).

    Fuel

    Employer provides fuel for private motoring in an employer-owned:

    Car: CO2-based percentage from above table multiplied by £25,300 (2021/22: £24,600).

    Van: £688 (2021/22: £669).

    Employee contributions do not reduce taxable figure unless all private fuel is paid for by the employee (in which case there is no benefit charge).

    Tax-free mileage allowances

    Employee’s own transport per business mile
    Cars first 10,000 miles 45p
    Cars over 10,000 miles 25p
    Business passengers 5p
    Motorcycles 24p
    Bicycles 20p

    Capital gains tax

    2022/23 2021/22
    Annual exemption amount
    Individuals, estates £12,300 £12,300
    Most trusts 6,150 6,150
    Tax rate
    Individual (to basic rate limit)* 10% 10%
    Individual (above basic rate limit)* 20% 20%
    Trusts, estates* 20% 20%
    Business Asset Disposal Relief (BADR)** 10% 10%
    Investors’ Relief (IR)*** 10% 10%

     

    *Individuals are taxed at 18%/28% on gains on residential property and receipts of carried interest. Trusts and estates are taxed at 28% in these circumstances.

    **BADR is available on qualifying gains of up to £1m.

    ***Shares in an unquoted trading company may qualify on lifetime gains up to £10m.

    Corporation tax

    Year to 31.3.2023 31.3.2022
    Corporation Tax rate 19% 19%

     

    Research and development relief
    SME enhanced expenditure
    deduction scheme*
    130% 130%
    Large company R&D Expenditure
    Credit (RDEC) scheme**
    13% 13%

     

    *Additional deduction for qualifying R&D

    **Taxable expenditure credit for qualifying R&D

    SMEs that make losses can surrender the deduction to HMRC in exchange for a payment of 14.5% of the loss (capped at £20,000 plus 3 x PAYE & NIC for periods beginning from 1.4.21).

    Main capital allowances

    Plant and machinery allowances Rate
    Expenditure 1.4.21 – 31.3.23 (companies only)
    – Super-deduction (main pool expenditure) 130%
    – First-year allowance (special rate pool expenditure) 50%
    Annual Investment Allowance (AIA)
    – expenditure 1.1.19 – 31.3.23 £1,000,000 100%
    – expenditure from 1.1.22 100%
    New electric vans 100%
    Writing down allowance: general pool (reducing balance) 18%
    Writing down allowance: special rate pool (reducing balance) 6%

     

    Motor cars purchased
    From 1.4.21
    CO2 (g/km)
    1.4.18 to 31.3.21
    CO2 (g/km)
    Allowance
    New cars only Nil up to 50 100%
    In general pool up to 50 up to 110 18%
    In special rate pool above 50 above 110 6%

     

    Structures and buildings allowance
    Fixed deduction per annum 3%

    Property taxes

    Annual Tax on Enveloped Dwellings (ATED)

    ATED applies to ‘high value’ residential properties owned via a corporate structure, unless the property is used for a qualifying purpose. The tax applies to properties valued at more than £500,000.

    Property value Annual charge to
    31.3.2023 31.3.2022
    £0.5m – £1m £3,800 £3,700
    £1m – £2m 7,700 7,500
    £2m – £5m 26,050 25,300
    £5m – £10m 60,900 59,100
    £10m – £20m 122,250 118,600
    Over £20m 244,750 237,400

     

    Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT), Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) and Land Transaction Tax (LTT) from 1 April 2021

    The Scottish and Welsh authorities have not yet announced the rates of LBTT and LTT for 2022/23.

     

    Residential property (1st property only)
    SDLT – England & NI
    £000
    Rate LBTT – Scotland
    £000
    Rate LTT – Wales
    £000
    Rate
    Up to 125* Nil Up to 145 Nil Up to 180** Nil
    125 – 250 2% 145 – 250 2% 180 – 250 3.5%
    250 – 925 5% 250– 325 5% 250 – 400 5.0%
    925 – 1,500 10% 325 – 750 10% 400 – 750 7.5%
    Over 1,500 12% Over 750 12% 750 – 1,500 10.0%
    Over 1,500 12.0%

     

    A supplement applies for all three taxes where an additional residential property is purchased for more than £40,000 (unless replacing a main residence). It is also payable by all corporate purchasers. The rate is 3% (LBTT and LTT: 4%) of the total purchase price.

    For SDLT:

    – First-time buyers purchasing a property of up to £500,000 pay a nil rate on the first £300,000 of the purchase price.

    – A 2% supplement applies where the property is bought by a non-UK resident.

    – A rate of 15% may apply to the total purchase price, where the property is valued above £500,000 and purchased by a ‘non-natural person’ (e.g. a company).

    For LBTT, first-time buyer relief increases the nil rate band to £175,000.

     

    Non-residential or mixed use property
    SDLT – England & NI
    £000
    Rate LBTT – Scotland
    £000
    Rate LTT – Wales
    £000
    Rate
    Up to 150 Nil Up to 150 Nil Up to 150 Nil
    150 – 250 2% 150 – 250 1% 150 – 250 1%
    Over 250 5% Over 250 5% 250 – 1,000 5%
    Over 1,000 6%

    Value Added Tax

    Standard rate (1/6 of VAT-inclusive price) 20%
    Tourism and hospitality sector reduced rate
    – from 1.10.21-31.3.22 12.5%
    Registration level – Taxable turnover £85,000 per annum
    Deregistration level – Taxable turnover 83,000 per annum

     

    Flat Rate Scheme (FRS)

    Annual taxable turnover to enter scheme Up to £150,000
    Must leave scheme if annual taxable turnover Exceeds £230,000

     

    If using FRS, the VAT paid by the business is a fixed percentage (based on business category) of ‘FRS turnover’ rather than the net of output tax over input tax. Input tax is usually not recoverable.

     

    Cash accounting and Annual accounting schemes

    Annual taxable turnover to enter scheme Up to £1.35m
    Must leave scheme if annual taxable turnover Exceeds £1.60m

     

    Inheritance tax

    2022/23 2021/22
    Nil rate band (NRB)* £325,000 £325,000
    NRB Residential enhancement (RNRB)†* 175,000 175,000
    Rate on death** 40% 40%
    Tax rate on lifetime transfers to most trusts 20% 20%

     

    *Up to 100% of the proportion of a deceased spouse’s/civil partner’s unused NRB and RNRB band may be claimed to increment the current NRB and RNRB when the survivor dies.

    †RNRB is available for transfers of a main residence to (broadly) direct descendents. It tapers away at the rate of £1 for every £2 of estate value above £2m.

    **Rate reduced to 36% if at least 10% of the relevant estate is left to charity. Unlimited exemption for transfers between spouses/civil partners, except if UK domiciled transferor and foreign domiciled transferee, where maximum exemption £325,000.

    100% Business Property Relief (BPR) for all shareholdings in qualifying unquoted trading companies, qualifying unincorporated trading businesses and certain farmland/buildings.

     

    Reduced tax charge on gifts within 7 years before death

    Years before death 0-3 3-4 4-5 5-6 6-7
    % of full death tax charge payable 100 80 60 40 20

     

    Annual exemptions for lifetime gifts include £3,000 per donor and £250 per recipient.

    Key dates and deadlines

    Payment dates
    Self assessment 2022/23 2021/22
    1st payment on account 31 January 2023 2022
    2nd payment on account 31 July 2023 2022
    Balancing payment 31 January 2024 2023
    Capital Gains Tax*† 31 January 2025 2023

     

    *UK residential property: CGT due within 60 days of completion. For non-UK residents, this applies for all UK land and buildings.

     

    Other payment dates
    Class 1A NIC 19 July 2023 2022
    Class 1B NIC 19 October 2023 2022

     

    Corporation tax is due 9 months and 1 day from the end of the accounting period, unless a ‘large’ company paying by quarterly instalments.

     

    2021/22 Filing deadlines
    Issue P60s to employees 31 May 2022
    P11D, P11D(b) 6 July 2022
    Self Assessment Tax Return (SATR) paper version 31 October 2022
    Online SATR if outstanding tax to be included in 2023/24 PAYE code (if under £3,000) 30 December 2022
    Online SATR 31 January 2023

     

    A CGT return is due within 60 days of completion of sale of UK land and buildings by a non-resident and of sale of UK residential property with a tax liability by a UK resident

    Useful rates

    National Minimum Wage
    Rates per hour
    From 1.04.22 From 1.04.21
    Aged 23 and over (National Living Wage) £9.50 £8.91
    Aged 21 – 22 9.18 8.36
    Aged 18 – 20 6.83 6.56
    Aged 16 – 17 4.81 4.62
    Apprentices 4.81 4.30

    Disclaimer

    You are advised to consult us before acting on any information contained herein.

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