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Deleted member 120672
- Original Poster
- #1
Hi, I'm a self-employed freelance ironing (sole trader) and currently travel back and forth to a client to collect and deliver ironing once a week, doing the ironing from my home.
I believe that I can claim 45p per mile for the travel back and forth to this client on my self-assessment tax return. It's a regular once a week round trip and I've read how I need to log the date, reason (collection/drop-off of ironing), miles and vehicle used. My question is...if I was ever audited is this 'log' which is simply an excel spreadsheet, is it really enough to prove this travel has been done?
The car is my own car and is used for both personal and business use. I'm aware that if the vehicle belonged to a business as a capital expense you'd keep all receipts and MOT receipts etc instead and have the expenses as the actual amounts rather than using the 45p per mile rate. It just seems that a mileage log is little evidence of the expense incurred? Thanks for the advice.
I believe that I can claim 45p per mile for the travel back and forth to this client on my self-assessment tax return. It's a regular once a week round trip and I've read how I need to log the date, reason (collection/drop-off of ironing), miles and vehicle used. My question is...if I was ever audited is this 'log' which is simply an excel spreadsheet, is it really enough to prove this travel has been done?
The car is my own car and is used for both personal and business use. I'm aware that if the vehicle belonged to a business as a capital expense you'd keep all receipts and MOT receipts etc instead and have the expenses as the actual amounts rather than using the 45p per mile rate. It just seems that a mileage log is little evidence of the expense incurred? Thanks for the advice.
