Loss relief for companies ceasing a trade
Newsletter issue - September 2021
Companies are able to relieve losses for tax purposes, subject to certain restrictions. These restrictions have been relaxed slightly in recent years, e.g. allowing companies to claim trading losses against other profits for future trading years.
However, COVID19 has seen many businesses, including companies, closing down. It is also anticipated that further insolvencies will occur once government assistance, such as furlough, ends, and companies are required to start making repayments on the various loan programmes introduced during the pandemic. As a result, terminal loss relief may prove more important over the next year.
Where a company ceases trading, terminal loss relief allows it to carry back trading losses that arise in the final 12 months of the trade and set them against profits from the same trade made in any or all of the three years up to the end of the period immediately prior to the period the loss was made in.
Note that the current temporary extension to sideways loss relief also extends the offset period to three years for losses incurred in financial years 2020 and 2021. However, terminal loss relief is not subject to a cap. Further detail regarding the extension is available here.
Since April 2017, a company can also include unused carried forward losses in a terminal loss relief claim, which can enhance relief. However, the three-year period for carried forward losses ends with the date the trade ceases.
Example
A Ltd's final accounting period (and final trading period) begins on 1 January 2023 and ends on 31 December 2023. Losses incurred in the final 12 months of trading can be relieved in the three years ending 31 December 2022. Any carried forward losses can be relieved in the three years to 31 December 2023.
The time limit for claiming losses also varies slightly depending on whether the loss is a "final 12-month" loss or a carried forward loss. If the claim is for a loss arising in the final 12 months of a trade, the deadline is two years from the end of the accounting period the loss is made in. If the claim is for unused carried forward losses, the deadline is two years from the end of the accounting period in which the trade ceased. These can, but will not always, be the same date.
BLOG POSTS
Saving money on your Mileage and Tax Bill
Are you like many of our clients, somewhat struggling at keeping track of your mileage to offset... Read More
Posted on Wed, 19 Aug 2015
TWITTER
Tweets by @OWSupportLATEST TAX TIPS AND NEWS
One of the headline areas of tax reform in the Autumn Budget surrounded Capital Gains Tax. With rates altered by the Chancellor, it was one of the...
Tax rules for individuals and companies using alternative finance are to change. The Government released plans for reform on the day of the Autumn...
With Christmas soon arriving, you may be planning a festive party for your employees or on behalf of the company you work for....
Plans to change tax compliance rules for charities are moving forward, as the new Government picks up proposals for reform to prevent misuse....
Q: I own a second home worth £400,000, which I bought for £250,000 and I have shares valued at £50,000, which I purchased for...
19 December - For employers operating PAYE, this is the deadline to send an Employer Payment Summary (EPS) to claim any reduction on what you’ll...