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We've scoured the web to get you the most up-to-date advice which includes the most useful tools on offer from the officials themselves.

Effective tax planning is essential if you are to minimise your tax bills. Simple tax planning can significantly reduce your tax liabilities.

The self-assessment tax return is an unavoidable burden if you are liable for self-employed tax or have complicated income tax affairs.

Corporation tax is charged on a company's profits. If you trade as a limited company, ensure that paying this tax is as painless as possible.

National Insurance Contributions (NICs) are payable whether you are self-employed or employed by your own company, although different rates apply.

As well as your legal obligations, you’ll want to ensure that payroll is painless and that you use any opportunities to improve your tax-efficiency.

VAT

Effective VAT planning aims to ensure that VAT is relatively painless, and that you are reclaiming as much as possible of the VAT you pay.

Capital gains are made when you sell something for more money than you paid for it. As a result, you can be subject to tax. Take professional advice.

Business property taxes apply to businesses with commercial premises.There are two commercial property taxes: business rates and stamp duty land tax.

If you have tax problems or face a tax investigation, it pays to seek professional advice and you must act rather than just hoping for the best.

Small businesses call for energy grants and tax cuts

5 September 2022

Almost half (47%) of SMEs want to see the government introduce energy grants, as the 'cost of doing business' reaches record highs. Business owners are also asking for tax cuts including reversals of both the proposed increase in corporation tax rate and the rise in national insurance.

Small businesses are looking to the new government's expected emergency Budget to ease the squeeze of soaring energy costs and a looming recession, according to new data from small business lender iwoca.

Nearly half (47%) of small business owners want to see the government introduce energy grants, as increases in fuel prices threaten to cause them damage in the run-up to winter.

Second on SMEs' list of policy priorities for the economy is an additional windfall tax on energy companies; two in five (41%) are calling for the ad hoc levy. Other key measures small businesses want introduced to mitigate the effect of energy bills include tax-deductible work from home costs like heating and lighting (30%).

With concerns over energy prices dominating the top of the list, in third place was cutting income tax, with 39% of businesses asking for this.

With tax issues playing a central part in the Conservative leadership contest, small businesses told iwoca they're looking for fiscal cuts for businesses in the Budget. As they grapple with higher monthly costs and cash flow restrictions, over a third of SME owners surveyed (36%) are calling for the proposed increase in corporation tax rate to be reversed, and a similar number (35%) want the same for the increase in national insurance.

More than two in five small business owners surveyed (43%) say the UK business environment is worse than it was a year ago. By contrast, fewer than one in three (29%) small business owners think the business environment is better than it was last year.

Looking forward, more than one in three (34%) small business owners feel confident that the business environment will improve in the next year. A similar portion (33%) report feeling unconfident in an improvement in business conditions, reflecting the uncertain economic times the country is facing.

Cory Greenhough, managing director of online commercial refrigeration and catering equipment company, FFD, told iwoca: "A retail customer spoke to me the other day about how his energy bills have gone through the roof. We sold him an open-fronted fridge (where consumers can grab-and-go drinks and sandwiches etc.). They're not particularly big pieces of equipment – his was about 1.5 metres. It's currently costing him £10 a day to run these, per unit. He has two. So that's about £600 a month just to run two small chillers.

"That's before anything else – switching his lights on, paying his staff, his rent, his business rates – all of the rest of it.

"So even if you base it on the consumer cap increases, in October that'd go up to £18 a day, per fridge – so over £1,000 a month for the both of them. But there's no cap on business electricity.

"In the past people have just thought about the cost of the piece of equipment, not the electricity they'll need to run it. So now we're now trying to educate customers about the most energy-efficient products they can buy.

"It's really sad to think, but at this current rate, I think in a year's time a lot of businesses – say your local gastropub in the country – won't have survived this energy crisis."

Christoph Rieche, iwoca CEO, said: "The next government must have its eyes firmly fixed on support for small businesses, who are currently unprotected from soaring energy costs. It's critical that the Budget carries a range of solutions for SMEs who are being disproportionately hit by current economic turmoil."

Story submitted by Jamie Williams, Hanbury Strategy

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