How to claim HMRC UK charity tax relief, including charitable donations, limited company donations, corporation tax and exempt and zero rated VAT. We fail to claim £600m pa tax relief on charitable donations for Gift Aid alone and that’s just one of many HMRC charity tax reliefs. Not just charitable donations, but limited company donations, corporation tax deductions, exempt and zero rated VAT, business rate relief and more, which you can claim up to 4 years retrospectively. At the end are HMRC charity tax relief FAQs, including charitable donations, VAT and trading.
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We can claim charity tax relief on charitable donations by UK tax payers via Gift Aid for a variety of types of charitable donations; including small donations in tins/buckets, retail, text, volunteer expenses, and membership. Here's my Gift Aid guide. on what you need to know and an HMRC guide on how to complete you Gift Aid schedule.
Higher rate tax payers can also claim tax relief on a charitable donation when they fill in their Self Assessment tax return. Effectively, this reduces the cost to them of the charitable donations they make.
HMRC also allows charities to claim tax relief on charitable donations, for the following:
Whilst not an option for most, tax payers that donate ‘pre-eminent objects or collections’ to the nation, may claim charity tax relief at 30%. The donor can choose whether to take the relief against income tax or against capital gains tax or a mixture of both.
Charitable donations are tax deductible for UK companies. They can claim corporation tax relief on charitable donations. Additionally, companies can claim tax relief on charitable donations of stock and equipment, and may be able to zero rate the VAT as well, sponsorship payments and the employee costs of secondments to charities and volunteering for charities in work time, which may be treated as business expenses.
Charities do pay VAT but can claim VAT exemption in areas, such as advertising, disability aids, construction, talking books, drugs and chemicals, rescue equipment, medicinal products, resuscitation models, medical and scientific equipment and even lifeboats.
There are also VAT exemptions for fuel and power, including the Climate Change Levy, a refund scheme for museums and galleries offering free admission, and charitable organisations can import certain goods into the UK free of duty and VAT.
And make sure you've identified items that are VAT reduced or zero rated, or are exempt VAT, which includes fundraising events, or scope of VAT, such as donations.
While you're at it, check that the VAT scheme you’re using is the best one for you.
The mandatory 80% business rates charity tax relief is well known. Less well known is the additional 20% discretionary charity tax relief and the 100% discretionary relief for non-profits that aren't charities. There are also reliefs for retail, exempt (disabled people and religious use) and empty buildings, small business, rural, enterprise and hardship. Click here for the HMRC guidance.
Here are the guidelines on Corporation Tax relief and allowances and tax guidance for CICs. Individuals receive 30% SITR tax relief, when investing in an eligible organisation. There are also EIS, SEIS and R&D tax reliefs.
Your charity can claim up to £4000 in employment allowance, if you pay Class 1 National Insurance (most full time staff).
UK charity tax reliefs and exemptions can take a lot of wading through to find all yours so, as you score questionnaires, the system automatically checks and audits the relevant ones for your charity. It takes less than half a day to complete all 8 questionnaires and, once you have, simply run Tax Reliefs in the query system for a report and all the relevant links to HMRC charity tax relief guidance to enable you to claim all the exemptions and benefits your charity is entitled to.
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If you haven’t yet registered your charity with HMRC to claim tax relief on charitable donations and VAT exemptions, here’s my guide on how to do so.
For a whole range of guidance on charity tax reliefs and exemptions, visit the Charity Tax Group.
The biggest charity tax relief I ever found was a £0.25 million VAT exemption but I'm not an accountant, let alone a charity tax specialist, so am not competent to offer professional advice. I have summarised and linked this guide to the HMRC charity tax reliefs and exemptions guidance to create an index of all the main ones I can find. It is a layman's guide to understanding HMRC tax reliefs and cannot be used in decision making. If you need professional tax advice you must seek it from a professional, because I cannot give you that.