³ÉÈËÓ°Òô

Post-cessation receipts and expenses of a trade

Produced by a Tolley Owner-Managed Businesses expert
Owner-Managed Businesses
Guidance

Post-cessation receipts and expenses of a trade

Produced by a Tolley Owner-Managed Businesses expert
Owner-Managed Businesses
Guidance
imgtext

This guidance note discusses post-cessation receipts and expenses from a trade for either an unincorporated business or a company. The rules for post-cessation receipts and expenses from a property business are broadly the same but the underlying legislative basis is different. These rules are discussed in the Post-cessation receipts and expenses of a property business guidance note.

HMRC’s guidance is at BIM90000 onwards and see also Simon’s Taxes Division B2.8 for more details on post-cessation receipts and expenses.

Statutory references to ITTOIA 2005 relate to unincorporated businesses, and CTA 2009 relate to companies unless otherwise stated.

Accounts for a business are normally prepared on the accruals basis, so any post-cessation receipts and expenses are normally accounted for in the final period of trading. Such profits have been earned in that final period and the expenses incurred in that period and therefore they should have been recorded in that final period.

Occasionally, however, income may be omitted or may arise after the final period of trading. Similarly, expenses could be incurred in relation

Continue reading the full document
To gain access to additional expert tax guidance, workflow tools, and tax research, register for a free trial of Tolley+â„¢
Powered by

Popular Articles

SEIS and EIS ― overview

SEIS and EIS ― overviewThe seed enterprise investment scheme (SEIS) and enterprise investment scheme (EIS) are very similar schemes which offer substantial tax incentives to investors in companies which qualify. The tax incentives for SEIS and EIS investments are intended to encourage investment in

14 Jul 2020 13:31 | Produced by Tolley Read more Read more

Foreign tax relief

Foreign tax reliefIncome and gains may be taxable in more than one country. The UK has three ways of ensuring that the individual does not bear a double burden:1)treaty tax relief may reduce or eliminate the double tax2)if there is no treaty, the individual can claim ‘unilateral’ relief by deducting

14 Jul 2020 11:44 | Produced by Tolley Read more Read more

Non-business expenses

Non-business expensesIntroductionIn order for an expense to be tax deductible it must be incurred because of an employee’s employment. Any non-business related expense is, therefore, not relievable except in some very particular circumstances.This guidance note deals with three separate issues. The

14 Jul 2020 12:16 | Produced by Tolley Read more Read more