Indicator - FL Memo
Telephone: (01233) 653500. Fax: (01233) 647100 customer.services@indicator-flm.co.uk - www.indicator-flm.co.uk
Calgarth House, 39-41 Bank Street, Ashford, Kent TN23 1DQ VAT GB 726 598 394. Registered in England. Company Registration No. 3599719
[telephone_number] => (01233) 653500
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[city_county] => Kent TN23 1DQ
[country] => United Kingdom
[website1] => www.indicator-flm.co.uk
[loyalty_agent] => Gemma Rump
[loyalty_phone] => (01233) 438022
[city] => Ashford
[webshop] => http://www.indicator-flm.co.uk
[loyalty_time] => <strong>Contact online support for any issues relating to the use of this online solution</strong>, for example logging in, using the search facility, understanding how the resources differ, how to save content, etc. <br />
If you have a <strong>technical question</strong> about <strong>content</strong>, please contact our <strong>dedicated Helpline</strong>.<br />
Mariam, your online support, can be <strong>contacted during normal business hours</strong>:
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[emailcs] => customer.services@indicator-flm.co.uk
[fax_number] => (01233) 647100
[street_number] => 39-41
[street_name] => Bank Street
[loyalty_mail_from] => Gemma Rump - Online support
[company_name] => Indicator - FL Memo Ltd
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Search - Tips & Advice Business Database
HMRC applies tough rules to prevent tax relief for entertainment costs. The good news is that there’s an exception for staff entertaining, but as the owner of the business does it extend to you?
Generally, gifts you make to your employees are taxable as benefits in kind unless they are covered by a specific exemption. However, are they taxable if the gift is being made for private reasons?
One of your longest serving employees is getting married and you intend to buy a gift. You’re keeping it simple with a voucher they can spend online. Is it more tax efficient for you to buy it
personally or for your business to pay?
Your firm’s Christmas bash is a few days away. It’s cost you £125 per head so far, but you expect this figure to rise. You’re worried the per-head cost will exceed £150 and so the tax and NI
exemption for such events will be lost. How can you prevent this?
If you or one of your employees work from home, your company can provide tax and NI-free help in different ways. At first sight they appear very limited, but there’s more to the rules than meets the
eye. What do they actually allow?
Instead of paying out membership fees and having the hassle of travelling to a gym each time he feels like working out, our subscriber wants his company to cover the cost of a gym at his home. How
tax efficient would this be?
You’re thinking of holding your first ever summer event for your employees. You’re not sure what form it will take but one factor in your decision is the cost and therefore the tax and NI position.
What do HMRC’s rules say about this?
Where you or an employee use your home for work it might result in extra costs. As these relate to the business can it reclaim any of the corresponding VAT on those additional costs?
Lockdowns have proved that you can work effectively from home, so you are thinking of investing in a garden office. What are the key things to consider and are there any tax implications?
During a compliance check an HMRC inspector warned our subscriber that because of a change to the rules he might face a tax and NI bill for providing their staff with workplace clothing. What’s the
inspector referring to?