Preliminary expenditure is, in broad terms, expenditure incurred
before it is clear that a film will actually be produced, and which
can reasonably be said to have been incurred with a view to
enabling a decision to be taken as to whether or not to make a
film. For this reason, it is often referred to as development
expenditure.
The expenditure must be expenditure of a revenue nature (
BIM56205). Most of this expenditure will
also be production expenditure (e.g., costs of preparing the
scenario and script), see
BIM56207. However, preliminary
expenditure is not restricted to production expenditure and may
also, exceptionally, include other revenue costs provided these can
reasonably be said to have been incurred with a view to enabling a
decision to be taken as to whether or not to make a film.
Under the main relieving provisions in F2A92/S40B or
ITTOIA/S135 (
BIM56210) preliminary expenditure which
is also production expenditure would be added to the general costs
of producing the film and would be written off under one of the two
permitted methods. Where the film is a qualifying film, or is
expected to be a qualifying film once completed, the rules in
F2A92/S41 and ITTOIA/S137enable preliminary expenditure to be
written off, at the earliest, in the relevant period (BIM56210) in
which it is payable.
To qualify the claimant must have been carrying on a trade or
business that includes the exploitation of original master versions
of films in the relevant period to which the claim relates. This
condition is important as a person who is planning to make a film,
or is making a film, may not have started trading in the relevant
period when the preliminary expenditure is payable. In such
circumstances, a claim can still be made to deduct the expenditure
in a later relevant period after trading has commenced. For
guidance on when a trade commences see
BIM70505.
The following conditions must also be met.
The rules governing certification of films as qualifying British films can be found on the Department of Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) web-site at http://www.culture.gov.uk/creative_industries/film/. Where you are uncertain whether a film which has not yet been completed might qualify you should consult CT&VAT (Technical), not DCMS. The main conditions governing whether a film is a qualifying British film are summarised below.
(i) Where the film is made by a company that company must have been registered and centrally managed and controlled in the UK or in another member-state of the EU throughout the period the film is being made.
(ii) An unincorporated filmmaker must be ordinarily resident in the UK or another EU member-state.
(iii) 70% of the total production cost of the film must be spent on film production activity carried out in the UK.
(iv) 70% of the labour costs must be payable to British citizens, citizens of other Commonwealth countries or citizens of EU member states or to ordinary residents of these countries.
Alternatively, where a film has provisional approval from DCMS that it meets the conditions of one of the UK’s bilateral film co-production agreements, or of the European Convention on Cinematographic co-production, it may be accepted that the film is reasonably likely to be a qualifying film for the purposes of giving relief for preliminary expenditure.
It is not necessary for the person laying out the expenditure to be the person actually making the film. A contribution towards the preliminary expenditure may itself qualify provided the person making the contribution is carrying on a trade or business of exploiting the original master versions of films. For example, a person may commission a film which they later hope to acquire and exploit. If that person makes a contribution towards the preliminary expenditure on that film a claim under F2A92/S41, or deduction under ITTOIA/S137 may be available.
Exceptionally, cases may arise where the relief already given for preliminary expenditure in previous periods exceeds 20% of the budget at the start of principal photography. Where the claimant can show that the earlier over-claim was based on a reasonable estimate of the likely budget of the film, the excess can be recouped by means of an appropriate reduction in relief for production expenditure costs in the first period of account in which those sums are deducted.
For the purposes of applying the 20% test, you should exclude from the total budget any deferments and participations, or other contingent amounts. Deferments and participations are sums which are only payable if the film is successful and generates certain levels of income from exploitation (see BIM56515).