EM3671 - Recalculating Profits: Private Expenditure: Taxpayer's Spending - Optional
Holidays
- how many a year
- travel
- accommodation
- spending money
Transport
- to and from work
- car(s): cost, insurance, repairs and servicing, tax, AA/RAC, petrol (including family cars)
- motor bicycles
- bicycles
- driving lessons
- caravans or trailer tents
Leisure activities
- electrical equipment - Computers, TV, radio, music systems, camcorders, video recorders, cameras, personal stereos, (plus tapes, cassettes, compacts discs, DVDs and records)
- internet use including broadband charges
- purchase of mobile phones and phone running costs
- musical instruments
- social drinking
- theatre
- cinema
- clubs
- evening classes
- hobbies
- sporting activities: viewing or participating
- photography
- books
- gambling (including attendance at horse/dog races), bingo
- football pools, lotteries
- animals (including horse ownership) and pet insurance/vet bills
Children/grandchildren
- clothes
- computer games
- nursery equipment, nursery costs and childminding
- schooling - fees, uniform, trips, extra tuition, voluntary contributions towards cost of school outings
- pocket money
- birthdays (especially the 'big' ones: 18/21)
- weddings
- contribution to further education costs (university, college etc)
- personal, holiday, transport and leisure costs as above
- examination successes.
You should not adopt a routine approach, some categories may not
be relevant whilst others may require more detail. There is a great
range of personal and private expenditure. A single oversight,
multiplied by the number of years over which the enquiry extends,
can result in the final settlement being substantially less than it
ought to have been.
Items which can get missed or minimised are those marginal
ones known only to the taxpayer and those residual items of day to
day expenditure which, although frequently too trivial to be
remembered, yield a yearly total which is far from negligible.
Careful consideration of personal and private expenditure on
the general lines indicated above, should enable you to identify
and correct an inadequate figure put forward by the taxpayer. You
can eliminate, step by step, expenditure the taxpayer has
identified leaving some quite inadequate figure for other
expenditure that must have been incurred.
Where, moreover, it is the taxpayer's practice to meet a
substantial part of his or her normal private and domestic
expenditure by cheque, and the bank accounts have been analyzed to
show such payments, a consideration of the expenditure by
categories can give an indication of what must have been met by
cash (or, for example, by cheques drawn on an undisclosed
account).
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