Tax deductions for health and safety costs
The Health and Safety Executive has sent you a bill for so-called intervention fees. Are you entitled to claim a tax deduction for these?
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Capital gains tax break for job-related accommodation
You’re in the process of selling a property that you bought as your home but because of your job have never lived in. You’ve been told that you’ll have to pay tax on any gain you make, but might a special relief get you off the hook?
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Should you revoke your 20-year-old option?
Your business has let out a building to a tenant and it is now just over 20 years since you opted to tax the property with HMRC. Should you revoke it so that your tenant no longer needs to pay VAT?
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Chip shop owner fined £40k for hiring illegal worker
A Surrey fish and chip shop owner has been left in shock after being fined £40,000 for allegedly employing someone who didn’t have the right to work in the UK, even though he conducted a right to work check. Where did this employer go wrong and what can you learn from it?

Tax deductible
You might reasonably think that any expense your business incurs in the course of trading ought to be tax deductible. For example, a fee charged by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) for advice following an inspection. But the general tax rule says that expenses are deductible where they are incurred “wholly and exclusively for the purpose” of its trade and are not excluded from deduction by specific tax legislation. Legal precedents may also block tax deductions.
A fine or a fee
The first step in deciding the tax treatment of any expense is to determine its exact purpose. HSE fees (so-called intervention fees), appear to be a charge for providing guidance about health and safety issues. Further, the fees are worked out according to the time spent by HSE officers. This would imply that they are deductible. However, health and safety intervention fees are only charged if the rules have been broken. In effect, they are a fine, and this can change the tax treatment.
Fines and penalties. There are no specific tax rules which prevent the deduction of a fine or penalty but the expense must still meet the “wholly and exclusively” condition and not be contrary to any legal precedent which prevents deduction.
Legal precedent
The most important precedent appeared in McKnight v Sheppard 1999 . The judges ruled that no deduction can be given for a fine or penalty because “its purpose is to punish the taxpayer” and allowing a tax deduction “diluted” its effectiveness at cost to taxpayers in general. However, the ruling does not, despite HMRC’s frequent insistence to the contrary, prevent a tax deduction for all fines and penalties.
Payments which are compensatory, e.g. an excess parking charge from a private company, are not precluded from tax deduction by reason of the precedent. However, the “wholly and exclusively” condition must still be met.
The wholly and exclusively condition
This condition was looked at in the case of McLaren Racing Ltd v HMRC 2014 in the context of a fine levied by an international racing body because the company obtained information about its competitors through spying. The company might have been allowed a tax deduction but for the wholly and exclusively condition. The Upper Tribunal said that “the activities which gave rise to the penalty”, i.e. spying on its competitors “were not carried out in the course of McLaren’s trade”.
Back to health and safety. Even though a health and safety intervention fee may pass the wholly and exclusively test because it can be incurred in the normal course of a trading, it fails to qualify for a tax deduction by reason of the precedent set in McKnight v Sheppard, i.e. it would dilute the fine at the cost to the taxpayer.
A fee charged by a health and safety consultant is not a fine and so is tax deductible even if they find that you’re breaking the rules. This goes to show that prevention is better than cure.