EIM03139 - removal or transfer costs: flat rate
allowances
Part 4 Chapter 7 ITEPA 2003
Before the introduction of a statutory exemption for removal
expenses and benefits in 1993/94 employers often paid flat-rate
disturbance allowances to employees. These were intended to cover
miscellaneous costs, and were exempted by Extra-Statutory
Concession A5 if the conditions in SE03140 (paragraph SE1232) were
met.
The statutory exemption works in terms of actual expenses
incurred, so strictly there is no place for flat-rate allowances,
which should be subject to PAYE. In practice, however, you may
allow an employer to treat such payments as qualifying for
exemption if all the following conditions are met:
- the amounts are in themselves reasonable.
What is reasonable will vary from case to case. Typically a flat
rate allowance is paid to cover the cost of replacing domestic
goods (see
EIM03120). Where this would do no more
than pay for such items as carpets, curtains, etc and the cost of
these is not met by direct reimbursement then you may accept that
the amount of the allowance is reasonable.
- you are satisfied that, taking one
employee with another, the amounts paid by an employer are in fact
expended on qualifying expenses
- it is clearly understood that the
flat-rate payment will be taken into account when deciding whether
the £8,000 limit has been reached.