INTM209010 - Controlled Foreign Companies: Computation of Chargeable Profits and Creditable Tax
Introduction
There are four reasons why the chargeable profits of a company not resident in the United Kingdom have to be calculated for Chapter IV purposes:
- to calculate the amount of its 'corresponding United Kingdom tax' (ICTA88/S750(1)) for the purposes of the lower level of taxation test;
- to establish the amount of profits which is to be apportioned to persons having an interest in the company if an apportionment is due;
- to ascertain the chargeable profits of a company pursuing an acceptable distribution policy; and
- to ascertain whether the chargeable profits exceed the de minimis limit (see INTM207000)
Chargeable profits are computed in broadly the same way as the
company’s Corporation Tax profits (exclusive of capital
gains) would be computed if it were resident in the United Kingdom.
The assumptions which have to be made to enable chargeable profits
to be computed are set out in ICTA88/SCH24. Additionally,
ICTA88/SCH24 prescribes a limited number of modifications to the
normal Corporation Tax rules. These are necessary to prevent
avoidance of tax and to ensure continuity in the computation of
chargeable profits since a controlled foreign company may not be
subject to an apportionment in each accounting period.
The chargeable profits of an overseas company have to be
computed to establish whether it is a controlled foreign company
(see
INTM201060). For this reason the
guidance below refers only to the chargeable profits of an overseas
company. It nevertheless applies equally to a controlled foreign
company.
