HMRC updates guidance for claiming new allowance
Qualifying expenditure on plant and machinery can qualify for a 40% first-year allowance from 1 January 2026. HMRC has now updated its guidance to help make claims. What do you need to do?
The new 40% first-year allowance (FYA) is available to companies as well as unincorporated businesses. Perhaps the biggest winners will be companies that purchase assets and lease them out, as these assets are excluded from full expensing, and so 100% relief is limited to the £1 million annual investment allowance. Until this year, the only option for relieving any excess was through writing down allowances on a reducing balance basis. A claim needs to be made on the corporation tax return, but HMRC’s corporation tax online service will not be updated for the new allowance until 2027. A company that wants to make a claim in the meantime, e.g. one with a year end of 31 March 2026 filing this year, will need to use a workaround. HMRC has now updated its guidance, saying that claimants should use:
- boxes 725 or 750 for claim amounts
- box 760 for qualifying expenditure
Related Topics
-
Selling spare items to your company
You’re short of cash but if you use the traditional methods to take more money out of your company you’ll pay higher rate taxes. Is there another way to extract profits without paying income tax or NI?
-
No such thing as a (tax) free lunch?
You run a small consultancy company and treat your staff to lunch in the office once a week. Your bookkeeper says it’s a taxable benefit in kind because staff lunches are only exempt if they are provided in a workplace canteen. Is this correct?
-
Judge criticises use of fabricated AI-generated cases in HMRC appeal
A tax tribunal judge has criticised the use of apparently fabricated case references generated by artificial intelligence in an appeal against HMRC. The incident highlights growing concerns over the use of AI tools in legal and tax proceedings. What happened?