Employee Benefits Changes.
Most employees are offered a range benefits from their employers. There is a huge variety of employee benefits, all with different tax and national insurance (NI) implications. So, as your local accountants, we have created a simple guide to make you aware of any tax conditions as not all employee benefits may be what they seem.
Benefits can be very complicated to understand, as some benefits, such as cars, are provided over a number of years, you need to know how the associated tax bill may change in the future.
Tax-free benefits
Below is a list of the most common benefits used which are all tax and NI free if all the conditions are met.
Pension contributions
If your employer has staged in for auto-enrolment and your annual salary is above £10,000 you should automatically be enrolled into a pension scheme.
Your employer’s contributions into that scheme are free of tax and NI, if the total pension contributions paid in don’t exceed your pension annual allowance. The allowance is set at £40,000, but if you are over 55 and have flexi-accessed your pension fund the amount you and your employer can contribute is £4,000 per year.
If your total income is £150,000 or more your contributions is tapered to £10,000 per year, therefore you will need to monitor all contributions into any pensions held in your name.
Salary Sacrifice
A salary sacrifice is a benefit arrangement where you give up some of your salary in return for benefit. Such arrangements can save you and your employees money, if the benefit provided is one which is tax or NI free from the table above.
The government is changing the rules so the tax and NI savings disappear in many salary sacrifice arrangements. The new rules will apply to new salary sacrifice arrangements entered into from 6 April 2017 onwards.
All salary sacrifice arrangements involving cars, vans, fuel, accommodation and school fees will come under the new rules from 6 April 2021. Other benefits, such as car parking near work, will fall under the new salary sacrifice rules from 6 April 2018.
Some benefits won’t be affected at all, and these include pension contributions, subsidised meals and medical treatments.
Company cars
The taxable benefit of a company car is based on the list price of the vehicle when new, multiplied by a percentage derived from its CO2 emissions rating.
The lower the CO2 emissions, the lower the percentage, which means a smaller taxable benefit. However, the list price percentage will generally increase each year, meaning you pay more tax each year on the same car.
From 2020 hybrid and electric cars will be taxed at lower levels, if the electric engine sustains a longer range. A hybrid with a range of 130 miles or more will be taxed as if it was a purely electric car.
If you would like us to take the headache out of employee benefits
contact us here at JIS Systems Ltd on 01932 22 55 33
or email us at info.jissystemsltd@gmail.com
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