GREIT07070 - Breaches of conditions: multiple breaches: example
This example looks at how multiple breach rules for one or more conditions interact. For detail on the multiple breach rules, see GREIT07065.
Example
Company C is a UK-REIT, with an accounting date of 31 December. It has the following history of breaching conditions after joining the regime on 1 January 2007.
- C breaches the Balance of business income test for accounting
periods ending 31 December 2008 and 2011 (two separate breaches).
- C breaches the Balance of business asset test at the start of
accounting periods ending 31 December 2010 and 2016 (two separate
breaches).
- It fails property condition 1 for accounting period ending 31 December 2017.
Breaches (1) and (2) are both in section 108 (Balance of
business income and assets tests), so regulation 7 only applies. In
the ten year period beginning on 1 January 2008, C has breached
each of the two conditions twice, so can remain in the regime
provided C does not breach either condition again before 1 January
2018.
Breach (3) is in section 107 (property condition 1) which is
in a different section from the previous breaches (all four were in
section 108). The multiple breach rules will apply if the failures
are within a ten year period. This begins with the first breach
(1), on 1 January 2008 and runs to 31 December 2017.
C has therefore breached regime conditions on five occasions
in ten years. HMRC will issue a termination notice under section
129(2)(a) FA 2006, specifying multiple breaches of separate
conditions as the reason. Termination will be with effect from 31
December 2015, being the end of the accounting period before the
last event that triggered the notice.
