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Using Bad Debt Tax Breaks To Save Your Small Business

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If you run a small business and customers fail to pay invoices, getting tax relief on these “bad debts” provides some compensation. Understanding the key rules means you can cut tax bills to ease cash flow strains when times get tough. Let’s outline the essential techniques for legally maximising overlooked bad debt allowances. Every little helps in difficult economic periods, so ensure your business squeezes out maximum value if customer debts turn bad.

How To Slash Tax With Bad Debts

Bad debts are unpaid invoices because the customer cannot pay up. These can be claimed as a business expense reducing your taxable profits. So, if you have kept records proving some invoices are irrecoverable despite chasing payment, declaring these as “bad debts” cuts your tax bill.

Unlike normal expenses, though, you need evidence for each unpaid invoice showing reasonable attempts to pursue debts before HMRC accepts that write-offs are justified. But once debts are irrecoverable, writing them off reduces taxable business income, meaning you pay less tax.

Act Rapidly Declaring Debts Bad

Review all unpaid invoices before finalising annual accounts to get tax relief quickly. Debts recognised as hopeless in the same accounting period as you issued the original invoice secure immediate tax reductions without waiting another year.

And even if debts turn bad after the accounting period closes, a neat tax concession means backdating bad debt write-offs to save tax earlier is still often possible. So expert planning means significant tax refunds could materialise directly, thanks to customer defaults.

Turn Bad Debts Into Cash Refunds

Beyond basic tax savings, transformed business losses sometimes generate tax refunds. For sole traders, reporting year losses from multiple bad debts can offset other earnings like employment or rental income taxed at a basic rate. So if electrician Liz suffers £5,000 self-employed losses from bad debts, using these against basic rate taxed wages could trigger a £1,000 income tax refund.

VAT Repayments On Bad Debts

If VAT registered, you can reclaim initial VAT payments on unpaid sales invoices, too. But VAT accounting rules prevent this for six months after payment default dates. Planning is key here. For example, applying for HMRC’s VAT cash accounting scheme could provide flexibility if bad debts spike amid challenging economic times.

Stay Afloat With Bad Debt Tax Breaks

However hard collecting payments from struggling customers proves, make sure your business at least capitalises on tax relief concessions available when the debts turn bad. Keep chasing paid-up invoices reasonably pre-empting problems, but offset irrecoverable sums against tax bills rapidly after formal write-offs. Then, investigate wider options like loss relief claims against other taxable income. Diligent debt control and creative tax planning buy vital breathing space, keeping small firms trading longer when times get tough!

Disclaimer

Our blogs and articles are for information only. If you need help with your specific tax problem or need advice for your business please call us on 0800 135 7323