If your client drives a company car they need to keep an eye on the tax they pay for using the vehicle, as this is likely to increase year on year.
The tax charge is related to the car's CO2 emissions and its price. An average car has CO2 emissions of around 160g/km, which means for a petrol car the driver is taxed on 20% of the vehicle's list price every year. This percentage will increase to 21% from 6 April 2010, and will be 22% from 6 April 2011.
The list price is the show-room price for the car, not what your employer actually paid including discounts. Currently the list price used for the tax calculation is capped at £80,000, but from 6 April 2011 this cap is removed. This will hit drivers who get their own companies to pay for top range cars.
Say your client drives an Aston Martin DB6 costing around £160,000, which has CO2 emissions off the scale. In 2009/10 they are taxed on £28,000 (35% x £80,000). At the 40% tax rate this amounts to a tax bill of £11,200. From April 2011 your client will be taxed on £56,000 (35% x £160,000). At the top tax rate of 50% that will apply in 2011/12, this will produce a tax bill of £28,000.
If your client drives an alternative fuel car, such as a hybrid, bio-fuel, or E85 fuel, they currently get a reduction in the tax charge compared to normal cars. This discount will be removed from 6 April 2011 for all alternative fuel cars, except for pure electric cars, which will still be taxed on 9% of their list price.
So the message is: get that expensive car out of your clients company ASAP, and if they must drive a company car, may be it's time to start thinking electric, or at least very low CO2 emissions.
Posted by: Bookcert Mentoring Team
Friday 10th July 2009
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