Tax advice of the week: Don’t overlook R&D relief

Nov 25, 2011

Share with
friends:

Comments (2) Print this article

Research and development (R&D) relief is often overlooked because firms “either don’t realise they qualify or think it’s more trouble than it’s worth”, says Tax Tips & Advice. Yet the R&D tax break is worth twice as much as other tax reliefs.

The definition of R&D is broad – it can cover the development of a new method of erecting buildings or a new software product for the financial sector. If your firm spends £30,000 on R&D in 2012/2013 and pays corporation tax at 20%, it will be entitled to a reduction in its tax bill of £13,500 (£30,000 x 2.25 x 20%).

HMRC has launched a pilot scheme offering a dedicated one-to-one service to “help companies formulate and optimise claims. “Once the principles have been agreed on, claims for the following two years will be accepted without the usual scrutiny and questions associated with R&D relief.”

Open to firms with 50 or fewer employees, the aim is to open it up to all businesses in the near future.

Comments (2)

Share with
friends:

Comments

  • 1. Joseph Heenan

    (21 December 2011, 09:58AM)  Complain about this comment

    The link http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/ct/forms-rates/claims/randd-vaa-pilot.htm is just giving "The page cannot be displayed because an internal server error has occurred."

  • 2. Moderator

    (21 December 2011, 11:22AM)  Complain about this comment

    Joseph - according to HMRC, "recruitment for the pilot has closed due to a high demand for the limited places", so the link no longer works. We've removed it from the article.

    Thnaks

Leave a comment

This will be the name displayed with your comment.

This helps us verify comments are genuine. It will not be displayed anywhere on the site and is stored confidentially.

Please keep your comment within 1,000 characters and relevant to the main topic. We encourage healthy debate, but we don't allow insults or bad language. Anything off topic or unpleasant, we'll remove. Enjoy the conversation! Thank you.

captcha To prevent spam-related comments please enter the characters shown in the 'Captcha' box to the left.

By leaving a comment you accept our terms and conditions.


>