EIM23042 - Car benefit: meaning of unsuitable for use as a private vehicle
Section 115(1) ITEPA 2003
The guidance on this page explains how to apply the third stage
of the test outlined at
EIM23040, that is whether that type of
vehicle is one that is unsuitable for use as a private vehicle.
Remember that the whole of the test at EIM23040 has to be
satisfied in order for a vehicle to fall outside the definition of
car". It follows that a vehicle that is of a type not commonly used
as a private vehicle will still count as a car unless:
- it is also unsuitable for use as a private vehicle, or
- it falls in one of the other excluded categories in EIM23020.
The words unsuitable for use as a private vehicle should be
taken to mean unsuitable for use by members of the public
generally. So, with regard to any vehicle under consideration, the
key question to pose is; what are the features of this vehicle that
make it unsuitable to be used privately?
One example of a feature that will make a vehicle unsuitable
to be used privately is the fact that it is of a type that ordinary
members of the public are legally barred from driving, see
EIM23043.
If a vehicle is not a ‘car’ for this reason, you
should consider whether the benefit can be taxed under the residual
benefits legislation, starting at Section 201 ITEPA 2003
