EIM21831 – Particular benefits: late night taxis: general overview
Section 248 ITEPA 2003
Where an employee is provided with a taxi paid for by his or her
employer for a journey from work to home, this represents a benefit
to the employee because journeys between an employee’s home
and permanent place of work are private journeys
[www.hmrc.gov.uk/helpsheets/490.pdf].
However, this benefit can be treated as exempt from charge
if:
- the failure of car sharing arrangements conditions are satisfied (see below), or
- all four late night working conditions are satisfied; and
- the number of such journeys for which a taxi has been provided for that employee in the tax year is no more than 60.
The 60 journeys is a single limit that applies to late night
journeys and failure of car sharing arrangements together. This
means that journeys under both headings must be added together when
working out whether or not the 60 journeys limit has been reached
For the exemption to apply,
these conditions must be satisfied on each
occasion that an employee is provided with a taxi for a journey
from work to home.
60 journeys per year
It is sometimes suggested that the exemption applies to the
first 60 journeys in a year when a taxi is provided, regardless of
the circumstances relating to the taxi being provided. This is
not correct. Section 248 is not an annual
allowance; it provides an exemption from the income tax charge that
would otherwise arise on the provision of a taxi home. It can only
apply when the late working conditions mentioned in the second
bullet above or the failure of car sharing arrangements conditions
are satisfied in full. The figure of 60 in the second bullet merely
puts a ceiling on the number of journeys that can be treated as
exempt from tax & NICs even where all the relevant conditions
are satisfied.
So an employee may be provided with a taxi from work to home
once a week. Even though the total number of taxi journeys in the
year is no more than 60,
the exemption in section248 does not apply, unless all the late night working
conditions or the failure of carsharing arrangements conditions are also met on each
occasion as well. Conversely, if an employee is provided
with a taxi on more than 60 occasions in circumstances where all
the late working conditions or failure of car sharing arrangements
conditions are satisfied, the exemption will apply only to the
first 60 such occasions. The fact that the 60 journey limit is
exceeded in a tax year does not disqualify any of the first 60 such
journeys from the exemption.
Late night working conditions
There are four late working conditions, all of which must be satisfied –
- either public transport has ceased, or
- it would not be reasonable to expect the employee to use public transport ( EIM21834); and
- the transport is by taxi or similar road transport. This
condition is not contentious and is not referred to again in this
guidance.
Record keeping
As with any benefit or expense provision, employers who provide
late night taxis home for their staff must be able to show that
they have treated the provision correctly for the purposes of tax
and NICs. Where an employer believes that the exemption in section
248 applies, he or she must have the necessary
management checks in place and keep sufficient
recordsto be able to show that the late night working conditions
set out in the legislationare satisfied in all cases.
It is not sufficient for an employer to have a published
protocol setting out the circumstances in which an employee can
have access to the use of a late night taxi, if nothing is done to
ensure that it is applied correctly and that the checking system
the employer has put in place to do so is capable of audit.
However, this does not mean that it is necessary for the employer
to certify in advance the use of a taxi.
The procedure might, for example, take the form of the
employer’s internal guidance for employees on the use of late
night taxis along with an internal verification procedure that
could be sampled to show that the qualifying conditions have been
applied.
That will not bethe case where an employee is simply given access to a taxi
service available after9pm on call. HMRC would regard work to home travel
by such means as subject to the normal employee travel rules. The
fact that it may be outside “normal office hours” does
not change that.
Failure of car sharing arrangements
See EIM10210 for information regarding transport provided to an employee when car sharing arrangements fail.
Transport provided for disabled employee
No tax charge arises where transport between home and work is
provided for a disabled employee (Section 246 ITEPA 2003).
Consequences where late night working or failure of car
sharing conditions are notsatisfied
See
EIM10220 for a summary of the tax
treatment that applies to journeys that do not fall within the
exemption
It is worth noting that the main guidance on PAYE Settlement
Agreements (PSAs) at
www.hmrc.gov.uk/guidance/paye-settlements.htm
states that taxi fares will normally fall within the meaning of
minor items for inclusion in a PSA.
