Tax, VAT & Working With Corporates
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Transcript Tax, VAT & Working With Corporates
Tax, VAT & Working With Corporates
Bill Lewis
14 November 2012
Tax - why does it matter?
Charity law: charities should not carry out a
non-charitable activity
Income/corporation tax: Charities run the
risk of paying tax on profits
Rates: carrying out non-charitable activity
affects entitlement to rates relief
VAT implications
Five Step Test
Does the activity amount to trading?
Does the charity have power to carry out
trading?
Is it primary purpose trading?
If not, does the trading fall within any tax
exemptions?
If not, should it be carried out through a
trading subsidiary?
Tax Exemptions
Primary Purpose Trading
Anciliary Trading
Small Scale Trading
Donations
One off fundraising events
Small Scale Trading Activities
First £5,000 of Charity’s gross annual trading
income is exempt from VAT, or
If incoming resources are in excess of
£20,000 then 25% of incoming resources are
exempt from tax up to a maximum
exemption of £50,000
Income must be applied solely to charity’s
purposes
Exemption applies to income not otherwise
exempt - e.g. fundraising exemption
Fundraising Events Tax & VAT Exemption
Event organised and promoted as for
charity fundraising by a charity or its
trading company
No more than 15 events of the same type
in the same location, ignoring events
where gross income is £1,000 or less
Events can have no more than 2 nights
accommodation
Exemption covers
Admission charge, brochures, sales of
advertising space, other items sold at the
event, sponsorship, raffles
NB IF THE CORPORATE ORGANISES
THE EVENT THE EXEMPTION DOES
NOT APPLY
Trading Company?
If not primary purpose trading, and
No tax exemption
Then consider routing income through
trading subsidiary
Driver for using a trading company is
usually corporation tax saving rather than
VAT saving
Advantages of Trading Company
Avoids charity incurring a corporation tax
charge
Ring fences other risks into a separate
organisation
May enhance VAT recovery - I.e. VAT on
costs may be recovered when they could
not be recovered when run through the
charity
How is corporation tax saved?
Charity owned trading subsidiaries are liable
to corporation tax just like any other
company
But if they gift aid profits to the parent charity
the gift is tax deductible
Downside is that if tax is to be avoided
completely no money profits can be left in
the trading subsidiary for investment.
Therefore consider charity to trading co.
loans
Tax, VAT & Corporate Sponsors
Pure donations are outside the scope
of VAT and not subject to tax in the
hands of the charity – but how often is
a payment from a corporate supporter
a pure donation?
Tax, VAT & Corporate Sponsors
For example corporate might want:
Website links
Display of logo and Corporate Colours
Descriptions/endorsements of its products
and services
Use of charity’s mailing list
Right to sell goods on the charity’s
premises/website
Tax, VAT & Corporate Sponsors
Other examples of what a corporate might
want:
Volunteering experiences for staff
Staff training
Can you think of other examples?
Tax, VAT & Corporate Sponsors
Providing such benefits to corporate
supporters in return for their support will
mean that their donations are treated as
fees subject to tax and VAT.
What to do?
Split payment between donation to charity
and fee subject to VAT to trading company.
Fee is commercial value of sponsorship.
Or fee of 10% of sponsorship is usually
safe if no known commercial value.
Smaller fee if sponsorship huge but benefit
to sponsor small.
Bigger fee if benefits huge
Know Your Corporate
Bear in mind that most corporate
supporters can recover any VAT you
charge them, but those whose services are
VAT exempt cannot – in particular banks
and insurers. Charging VAT hurts them
On a practical level many CSR employees
of big companies see VAT as an extra cost
when in most cases the company can
recover it. Have them talk to their Finance
people.
Examples to discuss
Soft drink company’s support of a childrens
charity in return for various benefits.
Name and logo of corporate appearing in
annual report of charity and nothing else
Website links between charity and
corporate and nothing else
How can I have my cake and eat it?
Alternative solution. Corporate makes a
pure and unconditional donation to the
charity, which without any obligation to do
so gives publicity etc to the corporate.
Nothing in the grant agreement or
correspondence or emails between charity
and corporate indicates that publicity must
be given. Payment remains a tax and VAT
free donation. BE VERY CAREFUL WITH
THIS ROUTE.
Bill Lewis
Tax Consultant
Bates Wells & Braithwaite London LLP
2 – 6 Cannon Street
London EC4M 6YH
Tel: 020 7551 7777
E-mail: [email protected]