EIM31661 - The general rule for employees' expenses: wholly and exclusively: apportionment
A single expense can be apportioned if a definite part or
proportion of that expense can properly be attributed wholly and
exclusively to the performance of the duties. That part can be
deducted while the rest cannot.
For example, rent may be paid for the use of a building in
which a room is used wholly and exclusively for the purpose of
performing the duties of the employment. The proportion of the rent
that is properly attributable to that room is deductible, see
EIM32825.
Another example. An employee's car may be used for both
business and private purposes. Where it is being used to make a
business journey the cost of that journey is incurred wholly and
exclusively for the purpose of performing the duties of the
employment and so can be deducted, see EIM31845. For 2002/03
onwards see
EIM31330 onwards.
You cannot apportion expenditure where it serves two or more
purposes concurrently and one of those purposes is not to do with
the performance of the duties. The decided cases that support this
conclusion are summarised at
EIM31662 and
EIM31663. There is an exception to this
rule where the non-business purpose is merely incidental to the
business purpose, see
EIM31664.
