CTM34195 - Residence: outward company migration: guidance notes for migrating companies
Notice and arrangements for payment of tax
1) FA88/S130, requires a company to notify the HMRC Board of its
intention to cease to be resident in the UK and to obtain the
Board's approval of arrangements for payment of the company's tax
liabilities. These notes explain the procedure to be followed, the
information required in support of a request for approval and the
arrangements that will normally be acceptable to the Board.
2)
Notice
2.1) A notice under Section 130 (2)(a) should be sent to:
CT&VAT, International CT
Company Migrations
3rd Floor
100 Parliament Street
London
SW1A 2BQ
The notice should give the intended date of migration (see
paragraph 5 below). The information required by Section 130 (2)(b)
and (c) should normally be sent with the notice (that is, the
statement of tax liabilities and proposals for securing payment -
see 3 (d) and (e) below).
2.2) As the Board will have to check the statement of tax
payable with the company's tax district, it would be useful if a
copy of the notice and of the tax computation could be sent to the
company's tax district at the same time.
3)
Information to be supplied
a) The name of the company, its address in the UK and its place of incorporation.
b) Its tax district and reference number.
c) A copy of the latest available accounts.
d) A detailed statement of all tax liabilities which are or will be due for periods commencing before the date of migration. The statement should cover CT and ACT and, if relevant, all taxes mentioned in subsection (7) of Section 130 and any accrued interest on tax (subsection (8). It should include any charges that arise as a consequence of the migration itself, for example, under ICTA88/S337 (1), and TCGA92/S185. (If an unlimited guarantee is to be offered - see paragraph 4.3 - the statement can be restricted to a brief summary of the tax position).
e) The company's proposals for securing the payment of tax liabilities. These should include the name and address of the proposed attorney and of the proposed guarantor (see paragraph 4.1 and 4.2).
f) If a corporate guarantor other than a bank is proposed (see paragraph 4.2), a copy of its memorandum and articles of association.
4)
Arrangements for securing payment of tax
4.1 a) It will normally be necessary to appoint an attorney
to act for the company in tax matters, for example, to receive
notices of assessment. The attorney must be resident in the UK and
will usually be an individual who is professionally qualified, for
example, as a solicitor or accountant. The Board will need to be
satisfied that the migrating company has power to appoint an
attorney. Further information and drafts of the power of attorney
in a form approved by the Board are available from the above
address.
4.1.b) The capacity of a migrating company to appoint an
attorney may be demonstrated by the opinion of a lawyer qualified
in the appropriate local law upon the following matters:
i) That the company has power by its constitution and/or by appropriate local law to appoint an attorney in the terms of the draft Power of Attorney (see paragraph 4.1.a. above).
ii) To know what formalities, if any, are required for a valid exercise of the Power to Appoint an Attorney.
iii) How the Deed in the form of the Draft Power of Attorney should be executed and whether execution should be Notarily Attested.
4.2) The precise form of the arrangements will vary from case to
case. Normally they will take the form of a guarantee from a
company, which must be either resident in the UK or a UK branch of
a foreign bank. A guarantor company must of course have power to
act as guarantor and the copy of its memorandum and articles is
required to satisfy the Board of this. The memorandum and articles
should be certified by a solicitor or an officer of the company to
be the version currently in force and as filed with the Registrar
of Companies.
4.3) The guarantee may be unlimited or limited to a specified
sum. An unlimited guarantee is given for the total tax liabilities
without specifying the amount. Where the migrating company has an
associated UK resident company of sufficient substance the Board
will normally look for an unlimited guarantee from that company.
Where the guarantee is given by a company not associated with the
migrating company, usually by a bank, the Board understands that
the guarantor will require the guarantee to be limited to a
specified sum. Under Section 130 (4) any dispute as to the amount
can be referred to the Special Commissioners.
4.4) Where it is not possible for a guarantee in one of the
forms indicated above to be provided, other arrangements may be
acceptable. Further information is available from the above
address.
5)
Date of migration
5.1) The Board will act as speedily as possible to approve
the arrangements but the time required will depend on several
factors. If possible the intended date of migration should be not
less than two months from the date of the notice. If it is
necessary to agree values of assets in order to estimate tax
liabilities, the time required may be longer and companies should
take this into account. However, where an unlimited guarantee is
proposed, it will not usually be necessary to estimate the tax
liabilities in detail and it may then be possible to approve the
arrangements well within two months of the notice.
5.2) A company may decide to change the intended date of
migration either for its own reasons or because, for example, the
arrangements will clearly not be approved in time to meet the
original date. It should then give notice under FA88/S130, of the
amended date and provide details of any consequential changes in
either the amount of tax and interest to be included in the
arrangements or the nature of the arrangements themselves.
6)
Non-compliance
Where a company migrates without the requirements of Section
130 being met, the persons responsible, including individual
directors, may be liable for substantial penalties under Section
131. Where tax liabilities of a migrating company remain unpaid
those liabilities may also be recovered from related companies, or
from certain directors, under Section 132.
7)
Telephone enquiries
An initial enquiry may be made to CT&VAT, International
CT, on 020 71472654 / 2701.
