EIM50625 - Tax treatment of building and civil
engineering employees: tax-free payments
Lodging allowances under the CIJC agreement may be paid without
deduction of tax if the employee was recruited by one of the
following methods.
- Personal application other than that at the
site. The worker applies for work in person at the employer's
central or regional recruiting office and is instructed to present
himself or herself for employment at a site.
- Written application to recruiting office.
The worker writes to the employer's central or regional recruiting
office, either in response to an advertisement or speculatively,
and is instructed by that office to present himself or herself for
employment at a site.
- Written application to site. The worker
writes to the site office, either in response to an advertisement
or speculatively and is instructed by that office to present
himself or herself for employment at the site.
- Recruitment through job centre or trade
union. The worker is sent to the site by a job centre or trade
union office in response to the employer's indent for labour placed
on the basis that the office will be regarded as the place of
recruitment.
- Transfer by same employer. The worker is
transferred by his or her employer from one site to another without
any break in his or her employment. For this purpose, associated
companies may be regarded as a single employer.
- Further employment in the same locality.
The worker, having been employed on a site where he or she received
subsistence allowance, seeks employment with another contractor on
the same site, or on another contract within 15 miles of his or her
previous employment, provided that he or she waives his or her
entitlement under the working rules to a periodic travel payment
for the initial journey from his or her normal place of residence
or engagement.
Under methods a to e above, the essential criterion in
determining that subsistence allowance should not be treated as pay
for tax deduction purposes is evidence that a contract of
employment existed before the worker was sent to the site. He or
she should not have been subjected to any process of selection by
interview at the site.
Payments of lodging allowances may also be made free of tax
under the rules outlined at
EIM10060 if an employee based at a shop
or depot is sent out from that base for temporary employment on a
site, which entails his or her living away from his or her normal
place of residence. This situation will rarely arise because
employees in the building and civil engineering industries do not
normally have a single continuing place of work such as the
employer's base. Instead they work on a succession of different
sites. Where that is the case, tax-free payment of lodging
allowances is not subject to the 24 months limit (see
EIM10060).