Tax implications on home office

3 October 2024
by
Sheraz Ahmad

Tax implications on home office

3 October 2024
by
Sheraz Ahmad

Tax implications on home office

Following the pandemic, flexible working hours are on the increase. This shift has provided many employees with the legal right to request flexible working from the first day of their employment. However, there is no statutory right for employees to work from home as of yet. Homeworking in a home office is already the norm for many self-employed.

Where existing space is not suitable at home for a room to be set aside as an office, many may look to build an extension, convert a loft or build a garden room. Should the employer pay the cost, a benefit-in-kind charge may arise as the employee is deemed to gain a benefit from using a company asset.

For the self-employed, tax relief cannot be claimed on the cost of the structure itself nor for any other costs directly associated with the building and office installation, including delivery charges if a ready-made office is purchased. The overall cost of initial decoration also falls within this category. However, repairs, including redecoration costs, are allowed. The cost of heating and lighting is tax deductible, as is the water supply if metered separately from the home.

Capital allowances

Tax relief may be available under the plant and machinery rules for certain payments. HMRC has issued a definitive list of claimable items and the contractor must itemise their invoice accordingly to show items that can be claimed. Such items include the thermal insulation of the building, electrics, kitchen equipment and fittings, washbasins/sinks/sanitaryware, furniture and furnishings (e.g. curtains, desks, etc.) and fire alarm systems.

Remember that capital allowances can only be claimed if accounts are prepared using the traditional (accruals) accounting method; capital allowances cannot be claimed if the cash-based accounting method is used.

VAT

The VAT rules differ from those for income tax and corporation tax. Not only can VAT be reclaimed on any running expenses relating to office use but also on the cost of building or purchasing a ready-made office, as well as for any decoration. The VAT relating to the business proportion can be reclaimed should the office be used partly for business and partly for private purposes – any apportionment must be on a just and reasonable basis.

Businesses on the Flat Rate Scheme (FRS) can reclaim the VAT paid on invoices exceeding £2,000 only if that invoice shows that the cost of goods purchased is separate from the labour cost; no split is required for invoices under £2,000. In addition, there is no restriction on private use under the Flat Rate Scheme.

Business asset disposal relief (BADR)

A claim under the BADR rules may be possible where BADR is claimable on the disposal of shares, and there is an associated disposal of assets used by the company. Such assets can include premises used by the business but are personally owned by the director. The main requirement for relief in such circumstances is for the asset to have been used in the trade throughout the two years before the share disposal.

You might also like to read: Beware of the lifetime limit when claiming BADR on the sale of the FHL

Practical point

Problems may arise should the office be attached to the main residence as areas of a private residence ‘used exclusively for the purpose of a trade or business, or of a profession or vocation’ are denied principal private residence relief.

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