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Half a million drivers to face company car tax clampdown

Salary sacrifices face review Tax loophole could be closed

- Martin Saarinen Martin_saarinen@dennis.co.uk @Ae_consumer

HALF a million drivers in the UK could face higher bills as the Government looks to close a company car tax loophole.

HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) has proposed tax reforms on salary sacrifice schemes which enable employees to reduce annual salaries in favour of perks such as cars.

Schemes have grown by a third in the last five years in part due to generous tax breaks by the Government for low-emissions cars.

The system is beneficial to employees, as they pay less in tax on the car than on their salary. Employers also benefit by paying less in National Insurance contributi­ons.

The new consultati­on looks to reverse the trend by closing the tax gap and raising millions more for HMRC. The tax hikes would not affect other benefit-inkind packages like medical insurance, annual leave, or cycle-to-work schemes, and is mainly aimed at high-value perks such as company cars.

Audit firm Deloitte estimates half of the one million company car drivers in the UK who have exchanged part of their salary for a company car or received a company car instead of a cash alternativ­e could be affected by the new law, leaving them thousands of pounds out of pocket a year.

Jane Ellison, financial secretary to the Treasury, said: “This growth represents an increasing cost to the Exchequer and creates an uneven playing field between employees and employers who use such arrangemen­ts and benefit from tax advantages, and those that don’t.” But Gerry Keaney, chief executive of the British Vehicle Rental and Leasing Associatio­n, is in favour of the schemes. He said: “These company car schemes offer a valuable way of rewarding and retaining staff, particular­ly for many public sector organisati­ons who have had to struggle with long-term pay freezes. “The new car sales generated by salary sacrifice schemes also give a valuable boost to the UK economy.”

 ??  ?? FACING THE SQUEEZE Drivers who have benefited from lower tax bills due to salary sacrifice could be hit
OFFICIAL
FACING THE SQUEEZE Drivers who have benefited from lower tax bills due to salary sacrifice could be hit OFFICIAL
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