UUÂãÁÄÖ±²¥

Capital vs revenue expenditure

Produced by a Tolley Owner-Managed Businesses expert
Owner-Managed Businesses
Guidance

Capital vs revenue expenditure

Produced by a Tolley Owner-Managed Businesses expert
Owner-Managed Businesses
Guidance
imgtext

Expenditure of a capital nature is not allowed as a deduction when calculating trading profits. Expenditure of a revenue nature is allowable, provided there is no specific statutory rule prohibiting a deduction and the expenditure also satisfies the wholly and exclusively test. See the Wholly and exclusively guidance note.

The distinction between capital and revenue can be incredibly difficult to make. In some cases, it will be impossible to categorically determine whether expenditure is an allowable deduction.

In some cases, it is better to avoid drawing a distinction if possible. For example, where any capital element is potentially covered by the annual investment allowance, there is no benefit to be gained from spending time analysing the potential for being able to treat the expense as revenue. The amount of tax relief would ultimately be the same.

The focus should be on items of expenditure which will not be eligible for capital allowances, such as certain legal expenses or extraordinary expenditure.

If it is determined that the expenditure is in fact capital, it is possible that it

Continue reading the full document
To gain access to additional expert tax guidance, workflow tools, and tax research, register for a free trial of Tolley+â„¢
Powered by

Popular Articles

Carried-forward losses restriction

Carried-forward losses restrictionOverview of the carried-forward loss restrictionAn important restriction in the use of losses carried forward was introduced by Finance (No 2) Act 2017. Subject to a de minimis of £5m (known as the deductions allowance), most carried-forward losses are restricted to

14 Jul 2020 11:09 | Produced by Tolley Read more Read more

UK VAT invoice requirements

UK VAT invoice requirementsThis guidance note provides details of the information that must be shown on a valid tax invoice. Businesses supplying goods and services that are liable to the standard or reduced rate of VAT are required to issue a tax invoice to another VAT registered person.If the

14 Jul 2020 13:46 | Produced by Tolley Read more Read more

First year allowances

First year allowancesFirst year allowances (FYAs) are available on the following items:•first-year relief on qualifying new main rate plant and machinery (at 100%, which is described by HMRC as ‘full expensing’) and special rate assets (at 50%) from 1 April 2023 (companies only). These FYAs were

14 Jul 2020 11:41 | Produced by Tolley Read more Read more