Tax administration for a company Flashcards

1
Q

The self-assessment for companies - the responsibility:

A
  • calculate its own corporation tax liability for each accounting period
  • submit a self-assessment corporation tax return withing 12 months after the end of the period of account
  • pay any corporation tax due within nine months and one day after the end of the accounting period
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2
Q

The self-assessment tax return must be submitted by the later of:

A
  • 12 months after the end of the period of account
  • three months after the issue of the notice to file a return
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3
Q

The self-assessment tax return must:

A
  • contain all information required to calculate the company’s taxable total profits
  • include a self-assessment of the amount of corporation tax payable for that accounting period
  • be submitted online
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4
Q

What all companies using electronically for tax return?

A
  • Inline eXtensible Business Reporting Language
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5
Q

What means Inline eXtensible Business Reporting Language?

A
  • is the global standard for exchanging business information in an electronic format and tags the accounts so they can be read by a computer
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6
Q

Three ways of submission of tax return

A
  1. Integrated software applications - automatically inserts iXBRL tags to data and produces iXBRL accounts and/or computations
  2. Managed tagging services - provided by agents whereby the company outsources the process of iXBRL accounts and computations into the required format
  3. Conversion software applications - allows the company to apply appropriate iXBRL tags to each item of data itself to convert the accounts and computation into the required format
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7
Q

When a company must notify HMRC when its first accounting period begins?

A
  • within three months of the start of its first accounting period
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8
Q

The time limit for notifying HMRC of chargeability?

A
  • is 12 months from the end of the accounting period in which the liability arises
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9
Q

What HMRC can issue to prevent companies deliberately the submission of the return HMRC

A
  • determination assessment
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10
Q

Determination assessment

A
  • is treated as a self-assessment by the company, and is replaced by the actual self-assessment when it is submitted by the company
  • there is no appeal against a determination assessment. Instead, the company must displace it with the actual self-assessment return
  • can be raised at any time within three years of the filing date (i.e. four years from the end of hte period of account)
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11
Q

The records that must be kept include records of:

A
  • all receipts and expenses
  • all goods purchased and sold
  • all supporting documents relating to the transactions of the business, such as accounts, books, contracts, vouchers and receipts
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12
Q

The records must be retained until the later of:

A
  • six years after the end of the accounting period
  • the date on which a compliance check into the return is completed
  • the date on which it becomes impossible for a compliance check to be started
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13
Q

Either the company or HMRC may make amendments to a return:

A
  • HMRC may correct any obvious errors or mistakes within nine months of the date that the return is filed with them
  • a company can amend the return within 12 months of the filing date, ap 31 March 2022, filling date is 31 March 2023, until 31 March 2024 amendments
  • if an error is discovered at a later date, then the company can make a claim for overpayment relief to recover any corporation tax overpaid.
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14
Q

Claims for overpayment relief

A
  • the claim must be made within four years of the end of the accounting period to which it relates
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15
Q

The payment date for corporation tax depends on the size of the company:

A

For companies which are not ‘large’:
- the due date is nine months and one day after the end of the accounting period
For ‘large’ companies:
- liability is settled by quarterly instalment payments
All companies must pay their corporation tax electronically

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16
Q

The key points of definition of a large company:

A
  • is one whose augmented profits for the accounting period in question are more than £1.5 million
    The £1.5 million threshold is time apportioned for short accounting periods, and is divided by the total number of related 51% group companies
17
Q

Companies that become large during an accounting period do not have to make instalment payments provided:

A
  • their augmented profits for the accounting period do not exceed £10million, and
  • they were not a large company for the previous accounting period
18
Q

Calculation of augmented profits:

A

Taxable total profits x
Plus: Dividends received from non-group companies x

19
Q

The threshold are divided by the number of related 51% group companies. Two companies are related 51% group companies if:

A
  • one is a 51% of another, or
  • both are 51% subsidiaries of a third company
    Doormant companies are excluded from being 51% group companies, overseas companies are included if the 51% test is met
20
Q

Four quarterly instalment for large companies are due:

A
  • by the 14th day
  • in months 7,10,13,16 following the start of the accounting period
    First two instalments are paid during the AP
21
Q

What is the basis of payment for quarterly instalments?

A
  • are based on the expected corporation tax liability for the current accounting period
    Interest will be charged or paid based on the actual corporation tax due per the final tax return
22
Q

Short accounting periods - less than 12 months:

A
  • first instalment due by: 14th of 7th month after the start of the AP
  • subsequent instalments are due at 3 monthly intervals thereafter, until the date of the last instalment is reached
  • last instalment due by 14th day of 4th month after the end of the accounting period
  • for an accounting period of 3 months or less, the full tax due for the accounting period is due on the date of the last instalment, i.e. 14th day of 4th month after the end of the accounting period
  • the amount of each instalment:
    # (estimated CT liability for AP) x (n/length of AP)
    n =3 months for a full quarterly instalment
    n = 2 or 1 for the last instalment if the period since the previous instalment is less than 3 months
23
Q

There are two key types of interest

A

Late payment interest
- calculated at 3.25% p.a.
Repayment interest
- calculated at 0.5% p.a.

24
Q

Interest is automatically charged if corporation tax is paid late. Interest runs:

A
  • from: the normal due date
  • to: the date of payment
  • it’s deductible expense from interest income
25
Q

Interest is paid by HMRC on any overpayment of corporation tax. Where interest is due, the interest runs:

A

-from: the later of due date or the date of actual payment
- to: the date of repayment

26
Q

Offence and penalties - late filing of corporation tax return

A

Within 3 months of filing date - fixed penalty = £100
More than 3 months after filing date - fixed penalty increased to £200
Fixed penalties rise to £500 and £1,000 if persistently filed late (i.e. 2 preceding periods also late)

27
Q

Offence and penalty - additional penalties

A

6-12 months after filing date - additional 10% of tax outstanding 6 months after filing date
More than 12 months after filing date - additional penalty increased to 20%
Failure to keep and retain records - up to £3,000 per accounting period

28
Q

The compliance check ( enquiry) may be made as a result of any of the following:

A
  • suspicion that income is undeclared
  • suspicion that deductions are being incorrectly claimed
  • other information in HMRC’s possession
  • being part of a random review process
29
Q

HMRC must give written notice before commencing a compliance check by the following dates:

A

If return is filed on time
- the notice must be issued within 12 months of the actual delivery of the tax return to HMRC
If return is filed late
- notice must be issued within 12 months of the 31 January, 30 April, 31 July or 31 October next following the actual date of delivery of the tax return to HMRC
Once this deadline is passed, the company can normally consider the self-assessment for that accounting period as final

30
Q

HMRC can demand that the company produce any or all of the following:

A
  • documents
  • accounts
  • other written particulars
  • full answers to specific questions
  • 30 days to comply with the request
  • 30 days to appeal, in writing, against HMRC’s amendment
31
Q

The key points of additional assessment referred to as discovery assessment:

A
  • restricted where a self-assessment return has already been made, can be raised at a later date to prevent the loss of corporation tax
  • cannot be raised where full disclosure was made in the return, even if this is found to be incorrect
  • only a company that makes full disclosure in the self-assessment tax return, therefore, has absolute finality 12 months after the actual submission date
32
Q

The time limit for making a discovery assessment is:

A

Basic time limit
- time form the end of AP four years
Careless error
- time form the end of the AP six years
Deliberate error
- time from the end of the AP twenty years
A discovery assessment may be appealed against