Fleet World Workshop Tools
Car Tax Calculator
CO2 Calculator
Van Tax Calculator
BiK Rates Company Car Tax

Company car to remain king but fleets must focus on value

So said tax expert David Rawlings n a keynote address to the Fleet Industry Advisory Group’s (FIAG) Winter Workshop on ‘Will Tax Kill the Company Car – What’s in Store for 2016’.

Rawlings, director of business vehicle and taxation advisers BCF Wessex, highlighted how employee demand for company cars had proved remarkably resilient despite increases in Benefit-in-Kind taxation over many years.

The Government has already announced annual rises in company car Benefit-in-Kind taxation to the end of the 2019/2020 financial year, but Rawlings said: “The percentage increases in tax look horrible, but in pound note terms company cars still deliver great value.”

Addressing the Workshop, held at the home of Northampton Saints, the premiership rugby union side sponsored by Travis Perkins, whose group fleet director Graham Bellman is a FIAG founder, Rawlings reflected on recent history to look to the future.

He told delegates to the workshop: “When emissions-based company car Benefit-in-Kind tax was introduced in 2002 many pundits forecast the death of the company car.”

Yet, while there had been a decline in company car popularity since then, latest HM Revenue and Customs’ data shows that the number of recipients has plateaued in recent years at 940,000 yielding £1.29bn in Benefit-in-Kind tax and a further £530m in employer Class 1A National Insurance in 2013/14.

Rawlings said that despite the switch to a CO2-based company car Benefit-in-Kind tax regime and regular increases in tax thresholds, the value of company cars remain undiminished.

For example, he cited that prior to the new regime the amount of tax due for a high mileage, higher rate taxpayer per £1,000 of list price on a 2002 Ford Mondeo was £60, which was a similar amount paid by an employee at the wheel of a low emission derivative in 2016.

Rawlings said: “Company car tax rates have increased, but we are where we were 14 years ago. I don’t buy the arguments that tax has killed the company car, although what we don’t know is where company car tax levels will end up.”

The Government is currently reviewing company car Benefit-in-Kind tax from 2020/21 and an announcement is expected by Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne in the Budget on 16 March.

Rawlings predicted that over the coming years taxes would have to increase with revenue raised used to support the development of alternative fuel technology while the government also looked to tackle air quality issues.

Nevertheless, he concluded: “Smart employers and company car drivers should focus on value rather than cost. The company car is, and will remain, one of the most sought after benefits over the next 15 or 16 years.”

For more of the latest industry news, click here.

Natalie Middleton

Natalie has worked as a fleet journalist for over 20 years, previously as assistant editor on the former Company Car magazine before joining Fleet World in 2006. Prior to this, she worked on a range of B2B titles, including Insurance Age and Insurance Day.