EIM31590 - Employee Car Ownership Schemes (ECOS): employer's PAYE responsibilities
Introductory remarks, common to this section of the guidance
Unlike car benefit (
EIM23000) and car fuel benefit (
EIM23700), no single body of legislation
deals with ECOS. Instead, the relevant law when considering ECOS is
drawn from various parts of the employment income and NICs
legislation.
This guidance does not attempt to cover all relevant parts of
the legislation in detail. Instead, it seeks to draw the essential
aspects together in order to identify where tax and/or NICs can be
payable under the normal benefits and expenses rules as they apply
to ECOS.
The same principles apply to ECOS vehicles as to any
privately-owned vehicles used for business travel.
Unlike the remainder of this manual, EIM31500 to EIM31599
cover both tax and NICs.
ECOS: employers’ PAYE responsibilities
As part of an ECOS, employers may directly pay their employees
amounts in connection with the acquisition or running of the car.
The different kinds of transaction in favour of the employee are
detailed at EIM31520.
The amounts may be different for tax and NICs, but the
transactions can fall into these kinds:
- PAYE income for tax and earnings on which Class 1 NICs are due
- benefits in kind for tax and NICs
- earnings liable for Class 1 NICs but reportable on P11D for tax
- exempt from tax and NICs.
All amounts which consist of PAYE income for tax or are earnings
on which Class 1 NICs are due must be dealt with through the
employer’s PAYE scheme in each earnings period. They cannot
be put on one side to be reconciled at the end of the tax year.
An ECOS scheme provider may assist an employer by collecting
employee business mileage records and working out what part of the
payment made to an employee in connection with an ECOS is taxable
as PAYE income and liable to Class 1 NICs.
But the employer is still responsible for recording the
taxable and NICable amounts on the deductions working sheet
prepared for the employee in connection with wages or salaries,
recording the tax and NICs due, and accounting for the tax and NICs
to HMRC. This is because Reg 66(2) of the Income Tax (PAYE)
Regulations 2003 (SI 2003/2682) states that:
“The employer must, on making a relevant
payment to the employee, prepare a deductions working sheet (unless
he has already done so)”.
If the payments made under ECOS are either PAYE income for
tax or earnings on which Class 1 NICs are due, they must be entered
on the deduction working sheet (DWS) operated by that employer. The
employer cannot run two DWS for the same employee. Each employee
must therefore be in one, and only one, PAYE scheme.
Separate PAYE schemes for ECOS payments not permissible
It follows that a separate PAYE scheme for the employer in respect of the ECOS payments should not be agreed and PAYE schemes should not be opened in the name of the provider in relation to the ECOS payments. This includes ‘Free of Tax’ schemes and other special arrangements.
