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Author: Subject: Setting up a company race team
ste

posted on 6/12/16 at 11:41 PM Reply With Quote
Setting up a company race team

Just wondering if anyone has any experience in this area,

I would like to get back into rallying in the future, it is quite an expensive hobby, so I was wondering the legalities about setting up a Ltd company, say ABC Racing ltd. Can I register for VAT, claim back the vat on the parts to build the car, Have ABC Racing pay teh entry fees any get it's income from personal sponsorship?

Sounds dodgy, but is it possible?

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ian locostzx9rc2

posted on 7/12/16 at 06:13 AM Reply With Quote
I think you could do it but I would speak to an accountant to see whether it would be worth it .
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tegwin

posted on 7/12/16 at 08:21 AM Reply With Quote
If you are claiming back vat the HMRC would expect you to be charging vat and making money. If you never posted a profit or showed money coming in to the business they would probably come down on you like a rusty old rally car falling from the sky.


May be possible to fiddle it so it works but tread carefully





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rdodger

posted on 7/12/16 at 08:32 AM Reply With Quote
Isn't it a legal requirement for a LTD company to run at a profit, or at least not lose money?






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WallerZero

posted on 7/12/16 at 08:34 AM Reply With Quote
I've recently returned to a contracting role and have my own limited company and the similar idea came to me too. I briefly ran it past my accountants and it is possible. One perk is that I can use the company to fund "training" (driver tuition, ARDS course etc etc) and the race car could simply be a company asset bought either with company funds or part donations. The other alternative is that the company then sponsors you and you stick a great big logo over the car, which in turn reduces the tax bill for the company.

I think VAT registration may be possible but again, speak to an accountant. Income from sponsorship is fine whether that's external or you as the director of the company, just check what the tax complications are of such things.

I don't think its dodgy, all race teams are set up as a business anyway. Just depends if they are funded by other operations within the business/group or simply there for racing. Personally if you already have a limited company which has an income from elsewhere, I think it would work well using retained profits etc. However, setting it up solely for VAT benefits I think would leave you worse off.





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nick205

posted on 7/12/16 at 08:59 AM Reply With Quote
As above I feel an accountant would be best placed to guide you with the process, including legalities and best practice etc.

My boss has a number of "dormant" Ltd companies, some with funds in them. My observation is it seems to cause him a lot of work around tax returns etc. I would make certain of the benefits vs. the effort before starting.






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MikeR

posted on 7/12/16 at 09:44 AM Reply With Quote
I've got a memory of someone looking into this a number of years ago (this is from memory so could be complete rubbish).

who will be dirving the car?

If its someone else then this has potential....

If its you, its a benefit of being with the company and you'll pay personal tax on it all. Its not worth it.

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Jon Ison

posted on 7/12/16 at 04:54 PM Reply With Quote
Mike summed it up, if your "sponsoring" yourself which in essence is what you are doing tax man would be most unhappy, if it was that easy (and legal) everyone would be doing it.
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steve m

posted on 7/12/16 at 05:08 PM Reply With Quote
"I know nothing" in the words of Manuel

But could your race car, actually be yours or a company car, and therefore all running costs to be tax deductible ?

steve





Thats was probably spelt wrong, or had some grammer, that the "grammer police have to have a moan at




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loggyboy

posted on 7/12/16 at 05:16 PM Reply With Quote
What do you do for work?
If self employed, Any clients that would be willing to sponsor you, you could then 'discount' their fees.
Or would you boss be willing to sponsor you? You might need to take a pay cut to balance out the difference.





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StevieB

posted on 7/12/16 at 07:24 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by MikeR
I've got a memory of someone looking into this a number of years ago (this is from memory so could be complete rubbish).

who will be dirving the car?

If its someone else then this has potential....

If its you, its a benefit of being with the company and you'll pay personal tax on it all. Its not worth it.


Might have been me, as I was looking into this at one time.

Same reasons really - I noted that a lot of race teams operate as limited companies, and presumably they don't have to pay VAT on parts (imagine a 20% saving on building a decent car, plus running costs).

I've never got a straight answer, either because people aren't sure and possibly the one's who do know don't want to share how they've structured their businesses.

Always interested to find the answer though...

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morcus

posted on 7/12/16 at 07:43 PM Reply With Quote
Your plan might have legs but you would need to seek proper advice. I was at a Business Finance For Non-accountants course a couple of months ago and the guy teaching it (Who is an accomplished accountant) said there is no law preventing you from deliberately running a business at a loss and if its a limited company there is no law against you paying your self a salary that effectively crashes the company, provided you pay income tax.

This came up because someone was asking something about Trump having had his companies go bankrupt a few times and he said he knew of examples of people deliberately running companies that made no profit but paid themselves big salaries using investors money.

If you form a LTD company you will also protect yourself financially from it all going Pete tong as you won't personally be liable for company debts under normal conditions.

Before asking an accountant have a look on Direct.Gov or what ever its called these days as it has lots of information about this kind of thing.





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GreigM

posted on 7/12/16 at 08:46 PM Reply With Quote
There is a fairly basic test here that the revenue applies - is the company's main purpose to try and trade and make money? If yes then it is a legitimate business, if no then it is a vehicle to avoid/evade tax. You'd have a very hard job as a one man band race team to persuade them that you are running a legitimate business.

Big race teams where (generally) the owner isn't the driver, there is genuine sponsorship, full time employees, premises etc is a far easier case to make.

[Edited on 7/12/16 by GreigM]

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morcus

posted on 8/12/16 at 06:18 PM Reply With Quote
I asked an accountant at work (we were talking about F1 so thought I'd see what he thought) and he reckoned you'd be okay as long as you don't pay yourself anything or take out any money.





In a White Room, With Black Curtains, By the Station.

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GreigM

posted on 8/12/16 at 06:39 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by morcus
I asked an accountant at work (we were talking about F1 so thought I'd see what he thought) and he reckoned you'd be okay as long as you don't pay yourself anything or take out any money.

You need a better accountant.

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