Business expenses

Hi,

Im looking to buy an Ipad2 or maybe a new laptop.

Can it be classed as a business expense? After all it is making my work more accessible ;)
 
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Business Listing
Nov 4, 2005
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The likelihood is that you will have some personal use and you should allow a percentage of that off of the business cost.

I would put this through the profit and loss account as likely to be less than £500. Really not worth capitalising as a fixed asset.

I guess I would get your accountant to deal with it in the accounts.
 
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MyAccountantOnline

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TimCaprica

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Aug 30, 2011
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The likelihood is that you will have some personal use and you should allow a percentage of that off of the business cost.

I would put this through the profit and loss account as likely to be less than £500. Really not worth capitalising as a fixed asset.

I guess I would get your accountant to deal with it in the accounts.

What do the accountants on here normally use as a threshold for capitalising? £500 just surprised me, when I used to audit BIG companies they normally had policies of less than that.
 
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Business Listing
Nov 4, 2005
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Amongst many other but just an as an example - two things that I consider:

- common sense approach based on application of AIA would give a net tax result of zero in such small cases

- the useful life of assets. These days what is the NRV of a e.g. a laptop or such like after a year

Depends on size of business of course but I generally consider £500 (in this day and age and with AIA) not to be an unrealistic capitalisation limit and a level at which any common sense gifted person would find hard to challenge in terms of suitable tax treatment of assets.

Of course this is just my opinion.
 
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David Griffiths

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  • Jun 21, 2008
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    What do the accountants on here normally use as a threshold for capitalising? £500 just surprised me, when I used to audit BIG companies they normally had policies of less than that.

    Was that in £-s-d? :D (and, yes Elaine, I do remember it, and even having to prepare accounts in it although I was in university when it disappeared)

    We had a client taken over by a subsidiary of a plc about ten years ago, and I continued to deal with the management accounts for about two years until they got their act together. Their cut-off for caplital expenses that long ago was £10,000. Trying to maintain an asset register with desks and other equipment costing a couple of hundred pounds would be a nightmare for a big organisation.
     
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    Business Listing
    Nov 4, 2005
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    I guess it would only be the most fool hardy and stupid of HMRC representatives to pursue a case of mis-capitalisation with a nil net tax result given AIA.


    Mind you these days you can never be sure what could happen.


    Personally I never rely on anything an HMRC rep tells me - prefer to rely on the actual law and when it isn't specific then interpretation is required backed up by a logic case.


    Logic and common sense goes a long way in my book.
     
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    TimCaprica

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    Aug 30, 2011
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    Yes I was told HMRC have a de-minimis of nil!

    But I guess the AIA is a relatively new thing.

    I don't think it's that hard for a plc to maintain a huge register though if they are using Oracle or SAP it really should be able to cope. It's not that much harder to deal with than hundreds of thousands of sales.

    Anyway this has got very off topic ....
     
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