Navigating business expenses as a limited company

Emily Coltman, chief accountant at FreeAgent, gives some tips on negotiating the minefield of business expenses.

When you’re running a small business through a limited company, you may find yourself paying for costs that relate to the company’s work using your own personal credit or debit card.

How can you record these so-called out-of-pocket expenses in your company’s accounts and make sure that you don’t find yourself paying extra tax when the company reimburses you for the expenses?

Emily Coltman FCA, chief accountant to online accounting software provider FreeAgent, explains.

Tracking your expenses

If you pay company costs yourself, it’s important to track these costs separately from the costs that are paid from the company’s bank account. This is because you need to know how much the company has in its bank account to pay crucial bills like salaries and taxes. If you mix up out-of-pocket expenses with costs the company has already paid for, you may find yourself panicking that the company’s bank balance looks lower than it actually is.

Also, if your company’s books are ever checked by HMRC, the first place they will look at is your record of what’s in the company’s bank account. If they find a mismatch between that record and the bank statement, they may draw the conclusion that you are concealing income from them and impose increased tax demands.

Beware taxable repayments

When you incur expenses on the company’s behalf, entering them into the company’s books as a cost is called ‘claiming’ those expenses. The company might then repay you for what you have claimed. You need to think about whether HMRC will treat any repayment to you from the company as taxable income for you.

If the company is repaying you only for expenses that HMRC are happy with, then the repayment won’t be taxable.

But the rules can be quite complex in terms of what HMRC are happy with. For example, as the director of a limited company, you can normally claim the cost of food and drink you buy when you’re out and about on company business. But you wouldn’t be able to reclaim the cost of a packed lunch you made at home to take with you to eat while travelling, without paying extra tax when the company pays you back.

You also wouldn’t be able to claim the cost of clothing you bought to wear for work, even if you only ever wear those items of clothing at work, for example the cost of a suit for an architect or a solicitor. If you did claim for these, then you would pay extra tax when the company reimburses you.

The exceptions to the clothing rule are:

  • A uniform that identifies you as being a member of your profession, for example a nurse’s uniform, or
  • Protective clothing, such as steel toe-capped boots for a construction worker, or
  • An entertainer’s costume, for example a wizard’s outfit to wear as a children’s magician.

If you claim these, then your company can reimburse you without extra tax being levied.

Don’t miss out on forgotten expenses

There are certain expenses that company directors often forget they can claim – which is a shame because omitted costs not only push up the company’s tax bill, they also leave the director out of pocket.

The two classic ‘forgotten expenses’ are:

  • Mileage for business travel in the director’s own car. You can claim 45p/mile for the first 10,000 miles travelled in the tax year, 25p/mile thereafter. Be careful with what counts as ‘business travel’, though, for example, journeys between your home and a ‘permanent workplace’ don’t count and if you claim for those, the reimbursement will be taxable.
  • Costs for working at home. You would normally be able to claim some of your home-running costs if you are working from home out of necessity as opposed to choice, and you are carrying out work that earns the company money at home, as opposed to purely administrative tasks such as writing up your accounts. The government has said that being home-based as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, for example during a lockdown or because your clients have closed their premises, does count as working from home out of necessity. Take a look at FreeAgent’s guide here to see how much you might be able to claim.

If you’re in any doubt about whether you can claim a particular expense without paying extra tax when your company pays you back, speak to your accountant for more advice.

Compare expense management software

If you want to simplify your company expense process, there’s a number of software tools that could help make life easier for you and your employees.

Compare providers now to find the perfect option for your business.

 

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Business expenses: don’t guess if you don’t know the answer

Emily Coltman

Emily Coltman

Emily is Chief Accountant at FreeAgent Central Ltd and a graduate of of the University of Cambridge.