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Wednesday 26 May 2010

Gift Aid for Companies and Wholly Owned Subsidiaries

Donations Made By Companies to Charities

A company that produces profits will be subject to Corporation Tax. However the company can enjoy the benefits of corporation tax relief on a donation made to a charity.

If a company decides to give money to a charity it simply makes a payment to that charity. The donation will be treated as a non-trade charge. No tax is deducted from the payment and the company does not have to make a Gift Aid Declaration to the charity. The charity will consequently not have to make a Gift Aid tax repayment claim because no tax has been paid on the payment.

In order to obtain the corporation tax relief the company will then deduct the amount of the donation from the total profits for that accounting year prior to the calculation of corporation tax. The claim will be made in the Corporation Tax Self Assessment Return (CTSA).

The company should keep normal accounting records to support its claim for relief in the CTSA. Any other relevant correspondence should be retained by the company such as a thank-you letter from the charity for the donation.

The donations cannot be carried over into another accounting period in-order to reduce the taxable profit for that year.

Example:

Company A makes a donation of £20,000 to Charity B. Company A makes a total profit for the year of £300,000. The £20,000 donation is deducted from the £300,000 profits to leave £280,000. The corporation tax payable by the company is calculated against the £280,000 figure, not the total profits of £300,000.

A qualifying Donation:

A company may claim tax relief on any donation so long as it is a ‘qualifying’ payment. A distribution of profit such as a dividend will not qualify as a donation for the purpose of tax relief.

Other non-qualifying Gifts:

-Gifts that are subject to a condition such as repayment
-Gifts which are associated with or conditional upon the charity’s acquisition of any property from the donor or any person connected to the company (except by way of Gift)
-Gifts where the company or a person connected to the company has received a benefit over a certain value in return.

The benefits which a donor may receive in return for a donation are restricted as follows:

-for donations of £0-100: 25% of the donation
-for donations of £101-1000: £25
-for donations above £1000: 5% of the donation
-for donations above £10,000: £500

Example:

Company A makes a donation of £950 to Charity B. As a thank-you gesture Charity B decides to make a gift to the company. In order for the original donation to remain as a qualifying gift the charity’s own gift to the company must not value more than £25.

A company wholly owned by a Charity:

Many charities now establish subsidiaries companies to carry out trading activities. These non-charitable subsidiaries will of course be liable to corporation tax on their profits. However these companies can make payments to the parent charity equivalent to some or all of its taxable profits.

The payment will be treated as a non-trade charge and will be deducted from the subsidiaries taxable profits. Dividends paid to the charity will still be viewed as a distribution of profits and therefore will not qualify as a donation for the purposes of tax relief.

Normally a company cannot carry any donation into another accounting period but special rules apply for companies owned wholly by a charity. A wholly owned subsidiary has nine months from the end of the relevant accounting period in which to make a donation. Therefore if the payment is made within nine months of the particular accounting period it can choose to treat it as if was paid in that earlier accounting period

For Example:

The accounting period ends in April 2010. The subsidiary can make the donation up to nine months after the April 2010 date and it will still be considered as having been made in the April 2009/2010 year.

Deferring the payment can assist in the cash flow of the company as subsidiaries will often want to make payment of their entire profits. The timing of the Gift Aid payments is primarily a matter for the directors of the subsidiary.

A company partly owned by a Charity:

A charity can establish a ‘joint venture’ company with another company which will be jointly owned by the two entities. Joint ventures can make Gift Aid donations and claim tax relief. However unlike companies wholly owned by a charity the joint venture does not enjoy the nine month rule. The tax relief must be claimed for the accounting period during which the payment was made.

Any payment made by the joint venture to the charity in its capacity as a shareholder will not be viewed as a qualifying donation by HMRC. Whether the payment is classed as a distribution of profits with respect to shares will depend on underlying nature of the payment.

If the payment was made in direct relation to the shareholding of the charity then this would not qualify for Gift Aid purposes.

For example:

The joint venture makes a profit of £400,000. The charity owns 50% of the venture. If 50% of the profits are donated to the charity this could be well viewed by HMRC as a distribution of profits with no subsequent tax relief for the joint venture.

Sources

See HMRC website for detailed guidance on this matter.

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