Finance Leasing Manual - FLMAppx1
Statement of Practice 3/91
1) This statement sets out the view of the Board of Inland
Revenue of the correct treatment, for tax purposes, of rentals
payable by a lessee under a finance lease. That view reflects
advice the Board have received on the application of the correct
principles of commercial accounting and relevant case law. The
statement sets out what will be the Inland Revenue's practice in
applying tax law to rentals payable under a finance lease, in cases
where Statement of Standard Accounting Practice (SSAP) 21 has not
been applied and in cases where SSAP 21 has been applied.
A) CASES WHERE SSAP 21 IS NOT APPLIED
ACCOUNTING TREATMENT
2) The Board are advised that finance lease rentals are
revenue payments for the use of the asset over time and, in
accordance with the correct principles of commercial accounting,
should be allocated to the periods of account for which the asset
is leased under the `accruals` concept.
3) Where a lease provides not only a primary period (ie the
period over which the lessee initially contracts to lease the
asset), but also secondary periods (ie periods for which the lessee
has the option to continue to lease the asset), then in determining
what are the periods of account to which the rentals are to be
allocated regard should be had not only to the primary period but
also to the economic life of the asset and its likely period of use
by the lessee.
TAX TREATMENT
4) The Board are advised that for tax purposes, the rentals
are deductible in computing profits on the same basis as they are
correctly allocated to the periods of account under the accruals
concept.
5) There is no entitlement to deduct the rentals for tax
purposes, merely by reference to the due dates of payment.
REVENUE PRACTICE
6) Inspectors of Taxes will normally be prepared to accept,
for tax purposes, the lessee's accounting payment of rental
payments where that treatment is consistent with the accounting
principles described at paragraphs 2 and 3 above.
7) Where the lessee's treatment of rental payments in the
accounts does not accord with the basis indicated above, Inspectors
will seek to negotiate the computational adjustments necessary to
secure for tax purposes, an appropriate spreading of the rental
payments, in accordance with the accruals concept.
B) CASES WHERE SSAP 21 IS APPLIED
ACCOUNTING TREATMENT
8) SSAP 21 recognises the transfer of effective ownership of
the asset to the lessee who is required to record the lease in the
balance sheet, as the acquisition of the asset subject to a loan.
The asset is to be depreciated over its expected useful life in the
hands of the lessee. Rentals are treated as comprising a finance
charge element and a capital repayment element.
TAX TREATMENT
9) Notwithstanding that SSAP 21 requires a proportion of the
rentals payable to be treated as capital repayment, the rentals
remain in law revenue payments for the use of the asset, and for
tax purposes the whole of the rentals should be allocated to the
periods of account for which the asset is leased in accordance with
the accruals concept.
REVENUE PRACTICE
10) Where the lessee has accounted for a lease in accordance
with SSAP 21 Inspectors of Taxes will normally accept for tax
purposes, that the finance charge element of the rentals allocated
to a period of account is deductible in computing the profits of
that period.
11) In determining what proportion of the capital repayment
element should be allowed for tax purposes in a period of account,
Inspectors will normally be prepared to accept that the properly
computed commercial depreciation of the asset which is charged to
the profit and loss account in that period represents the
appropriate amount.
12) Where, however, the depreciation charge is not calculated
on normal commercial accounting principles) then it will not
represent the appropriate proportion of the capital repayment
element of the rental. In such cases, the Inspector will allow such
part of the rentals for the period as represents the properly
calculated proportion of the capital repayment element which should
be allocated to that period in accordance with the accruals
concept.
TIMING OF INTRODUCTION
13) The practice described in paragraphs 6-7 and 10-12 above
will be applied to leases entered into after the date of this
statement, 11 April 1991.
