Hello
I’m Rob from the Green Commute Initiative.
This is the correct information:
As a VAT registered business you can either claim the VAT back on the purchase and then at the end of the salary sacrifice issue an invoice to the employee for the gross amount of salary sacrifice including VAT. (The salary sacrifice amount includes VAT) or you can simply not claim the VAT back making a note in your accounts to this effect. We recommend the second method but either is fine. As long as the VAT is paid HMRC are happy. Call your VAT helpline to confirm.
This is the revised guidance on VAT. See section 2 at the bottom of page 2.
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/457866/cycle-to-work-guidance-update.pdf
So on the £1,000 example the HR employee will save £420 (40% tax and 2% NI) An employer can give the £138 employer’s NI saving to the employee (13.8%) making the total saving £558 so the bike could cost as little as £442 but that’s the best that’s possible. Lower rate employees will save £ 320 (20% tax and 12% NI)
We tell people not to reclaim the VAT is it makes the accounting much easier.
PLEASE ALSO BE AWARE OF THIS
To get the tax benefits in a C2W scheme the employee cannot own the bike. So they have to hire it.
Any agreement that provides something where the user won’t gain ownership such as Hire purchase is a hire agreement. Any hire agreement that last longer than three months is a regulated hire agreement under the Consumer Credit Act and if you issue one without being Authorised and Regulated by the FCA you’re committing an offence. There is an exemption for C2W schemes up to £1,000 hence the limit. You can see it here:
https://www.handbook.fca.org.uk/handbook/PERG/2/11.html scroll down to C2W.
So any employer issuing a hire agreement to their employee over £1,000 without being regulated by the FCA for consumer hire is committing a criminal offence.
GCI Ltd is regulated the FCA so can hire anything of any value to anyone.