Commercial property owners set to lose £1bn in unclaimed tax relief

UK commercial property owners are sitting on an estimated £1bn in unclaimed tax relief, according to capital allowances specialists, Catax Solutions.


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Monday 10th March 2014

Commercial property owners set to lose £1bn in unclaimed tax relief

But starting on 1 April 2014, when the 2012 Finance Bill will finally be implemented following a 2-year transition period, a sizeable proportion of that unclaimed tax relief is going to be lost forever.
 
For any individual or business that owns commercial property, this date is vital: from that moment on, unless unclaimed capital allowances are identified and documented at the point at which commercial properties are bought or sold, they will be lost, forever.
 
Very few of the parties involved in commercial property transactions — the owners, lawyers, financial advisers and accountants — understand the impending changes to the tax regime. In some cases they are not aware of it at all.
 
The result is that a very large percentage of transactions are likely to take place this year where all unclaimed capital allowances relief is lost to both the buyer and the seller. And this will carry on during the following tax years unless awareness of this area of tax improves.
 
Mark Tighe, Managing Director, Catax Solutions commented:
 
"Unless they sit up and take note of the legislative changes that are now upon us, Britain's commercial property owners will be haemorrhaging tax relief in the coming financial year — and every year thereafter.
 
“If capital allowances aren't identified and documented at the point of sale then they will be lost forever, meaning a loss of thousands, tens of thousands or even hundreds of thousands of pounds to the buyer or seller. And right now, there's no doubt whatsoever that a very large percentage of transactions will take place this year without this happening: the awareness simply isn't there.
 
“Unfortunately, the loss of a sizeable tax benefit is only the start. Things are likely to get litigious for any party that oversaw the transaction — whether lawyer, broker, accountant or financial adviser — when their clients discover that they have lost potentially sizeable tax relief. If awareness levels stay as they are then, from a legal standpoint, the next few years could be fractious and represent a considerable financial threat."

Author:
Amy Loddington Communications director Communications director
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