Mitigating the CT rate hike on company gains
Your company made a capital gain in November 2022 when the corporation tax (CT) rate was 19%. But, as the gain falls in its financial year to 30 September 2023 will part of it be taxable at the 25% rate which applies to profits from 1 April 2023?
Which CT rate?
The answer to the question above is important because it can make an appreciable difference to a company’s corporation tax (CT) bill.
Example. Acom Ltd’s current financial year ends on 30 September 2023. It sold investments in November 2022 making a gain of £200,000. If the gain could be attributed to profits in the period prior to 1 April 2023, CT at 19% would apply to the whole gain, but if it’s attributable to the accounting period as a whole the 25% would apply to part. That could mean a difference of up to £6,000 (£200,000 x 6/12) x (25% - 19%)).
Our view
The answer to the question in our view is that gains count as part of a company’s chargeable profits and must, in effect, be attributed evenly across the whole of the CT accounting period in which they occur. Therefore, part of the gain for an accounting period that straddles 1 April 2023 is subject to the higher post-1 April CT rates. To be sure we put the question to HMRC’s technical advisors who, to our surprise, replied that a gain which occurred prior to 1 April 2023 in an accounting period is taxable at the CT applicable in the tax year it was made, i.e. 19%.
To good to be true
While we would have liked HMRC’s view to have been correct, it seemed too good to be true. Before we could respond to HMRC we received another letter from it reversing its original answer and confirming our view.
Profits of a CT accounting period which fall into more than one tax year (for CT purposes a tax year runs from 1 April to 31 March) must be divided between each year by time apportioning the profits including gains. The CT rate(s) relevant for each tax year are then applied as illustrated in the example above (see The next step ).
By changing your company’s financial period it’s possible to work around the rules for apportioning profits to prevent the attribution of part of a pre-1 April 2023 gain to the post 1-April period, and so prevent the new higher CT rate from applying.
Example. The circumstances are the same as in the previous example, except that Acom shortens its financial period from one year to six months, so that it ends on 31 March 2023. The CT accounting period is therefore also shortened to the six months to 31 March. The gain of £200,000 is therefore attributable to the 2022 CT year and therefore the rate of tax applicable is 19%, thus saving £6,000 CT.
Conditions for changing dates
Acom can change its financial year if it hasn’t already submitted its accounts covering the 31 March, or made another change within the previous five years; and does so before the Companies House filing date for the revised period of accounts, i.e. 31 December 2023
Related Topics
-
Cut your losses to get a tax refund
You invested in a company that’s now in dire straits and your shares are worth next to nothing. Selling them isn’t an option so how do you go about getting some tax back on your bad investment?
-
HMRC updates advisory fuel rates from 1 March 2026
HMRC has published the latest advisory fuel and electric rates (AFRs) for company cars, effective from 1 March 2026. Several rates have changed since the previous quarter. What should employers be aware of?
-
5 April deadline approaching for key tax relief claims
With the end of the 2025/26 tax year now less than seven weeks away, business owners and company directors should remember that several valuable reliefs and elections must be made before 5 April. Which opportunities are about to close?
This website uses both its own and third-party cookies to analyze our services and navigation on our website in order to improve its contents (analytical purposes: measure visits and sources of web traffic). The legal basis is the consent of the user, except in the case of basic cookies, which are essential to navigate this website.