Do HMRC think my van is a car?

It’s the Gross vehicle weight,
T28 = 2800kg
T30 = 3000kg
T32 = 3200kg
ie
gross vehicle weight - kerb weight = load capacity

kerb weight = weight of empty van
load capacity = how much stuff you can put in it

hope it helps

Thanks. What's strange is this must mean you cant claim vat on a van like a kangoo, berlingo, connect. Odd!
 
Do you think that means when the notes are released you'll have to backpay, or are you fine beause at the time there were no notes.


i assume i will have to backpay, however, i would accept back to dec 2020 when i got the t30 kombi, as oposed to 2018--2020 when i had the t32 kombi

the t32 was bought as a commercial vehicle, hmrc agree at the time and i paid BIK on a commercial vehicle, and vat was claimed back on the purchase

i accept the t30 is going to be classed as a car for bik, however, id sooner pay tax on a 40 kombi, than a 40k car which has no uses for a family or my weekend fishing excursions

regardless of monthly tax increases, where else could i get a brand new t30 kombi, unlimited fuel and private use, for an approx 650 notes a month?
considering the office is a 150mile round trip 5 days a week to start with, thats without any other personal use etc?

and in 2-3 yrs and 110k--140k on the clock, just chop it in for another one?
 
A key part of the guidance in the above link is;
“It is worth noting that Vehicle Excise Duty and VAT legislation are both different to tax legislation,”

its been said before on here, HMRC are two different agencies in one, the old HMCE dealing with VAT and the old Inland Revenue dealing with income tax so don’t ever expect one sensible ruling coving how a vehicle it’s treated for tax purposes!!!
 
Pretty sure the T32 4-Motion Kombi won’t quite take 1000kg, the extra drive gubbins takes away a bit of the payload.

My accountant looked into it after I got mine and advised me to play it safe and pay the vat.
 
Hi all -

I've been planning on a new T6 van to convert to a camper this spring; I work as a videographer and travel quite a bit around the place on shoots with a bunch of gear; the majority being in rural areas. I also have previously been a member of a coworking space which went under due to the pandemic, so having a van i could travel in, carry gear, stay in for the day to do edits etc and also potentially sleep in makes a lot of sense. I of course would use it with my wife on and off but I can totally justify the use of it as a portable office/work vehicle. However my accountant has come back to me and said that as soon as I put a seat in the back (let alone a rock and roll bed) then the HMRC class my van as a car, citing this case, and therefore I cannot claim it as a commercial vehicle (making it pointless to put through my limited company). Seems crazy to me for a variety of reasons, but I was wondering if anyone had come up against this and knew how absolute it was and if there's a workaround? The case specifically relates to crew cab kombi's but I'm not sure how these legal precedents work really.

Thanks!

I’m in a similar position as director of my own VAT registered Ltd company. We have gone for a no bulkhead PV with swivel front seats, a folding folding free standing table, insulation and carpet line, 240v power and heater that allows me to do my business as per an on site mobile office. This conversion is a legitimate business cost and I don’t feel justification to HMRC will be challenging.

We have gone down the route of a privately purchased Seatpod as crucially the extra seats are not passenger carrying seats, having no seatbelts. There is also the added flexibility of easy removal which retains van capability and doesn’t leave brackets on the floor.

I think this is a reasonable solution for us as a couple, that puts is in a place where we could have a pragmatic conversation with HMRC if they had concerns....rather than going down the Kombi conversion route which to all intents and purposes results in a vehicle that has the CocaCola case law around it.
 
I’m in a similar position as director of my own VAT registered Ltd company. We have gone for a no bulkhead PV with swivel front seats, a folding folding free standing table, insulation and carpet line, 240v power and heater that allows me to do my business as per an on site mobile office. This conversion is a legitimate business cost and I don’t feel justification to HMRC will be challenging.

We have gone down the route of a privately purchased Seatpod as crucially the extra seats are not passenger carrying seats, having no seatbelts. There is also the added flexibility of easy removal which retains van capability and doesn’t leave brackets on the floor.

I think this is a reasonable solution for us as a couple, that puts is in a place where we could have a pragmatic conversation with HMRC if they had concerns....rather than going down the Kombi conversion route which to all intents and purposes results in a vehicle that has the CocaCola case law around it.

Be careful using coke as an example, as their kombi seats were removed and removable storage units were put in the seat place. This system meant that during the working week it was a 2 seater, and weekends 5 seater. He still ended up with £30k tax bill as it was backdated +5 years
 
Be careful using coke as an example, as their kombi seats were removed and removable storage units were put in the seat place. This system meant that during the working week it was a 2 seater, and weekends 5 seater. He still ended up with £30k tax bill as it was backdated +5 years

This is another thing I'm wondering; as it seems so ambiguous, I'm wondering at what point if i just go for it in a limited way (maybe a removable camping pod or the like and keep rest as it is) they can can claim back. In the example about what would that £30k be? I'd be paying up front so assuming they'd want the initial VAT repaid (maybe there's interest to pay too?) and then is it the benefit in kind for each year?
 
If your T28 is a Kombi then you can't (legally) claim the VAT back, if you T28 is a panel van then you can.

Sorry just going through all these again as my head is spinning. In your previous post you said only a T32 can carry 1 tonne in back so can have VAT claimed, but the T28 is ok? Apologies but super confused , appreciate the help.
 
Be careful using coke as an example, as their kombi seats were removed and removable storage units were put in the seat place. This system meant that during the working week it was a 2 seater, and weekends 5 seater. He still ended up with £30k tax bill as it was backdated +5 years
The difference is kombi seats have seatbelts, hence the space occupied by the seats in the vehicle can lawfully and equally used to carry passengers as carrying goods or burden. This was the key point in the case. If a seat does not have a seatbelt, it’s not a passenger seat.
 
The difference is kombi seats have seatbelts, hence the space occupied by the seats in the vehicle can lawfully and equally used to carry passengers as carrying goods or burden. This was the key point in the case. If a seat does not have a seatbelt, it’s not a passenger seat.
Ah ok - i wonder if there's a case for a rock and roll bed with detachable seatbelts...
 
Ok so managed to sit down with my accountant and go through in detail, and here's the summary for anyone that's interested. The definition of a commercial vehicle is what it all hinges on, and there's so many components to the argument it could go either way but you'd never be sure you'd comply if you got an inspection. So VAT is less of a problem, and you'd be more able to claim this as the commercial ruling is a bit more lenient, and if you got a visit from tax man you'd likely just have to pay that back. But the BIK is what screws it up, because the definition here is more strict and if you did fail an inspection you could be made to repay years of BIK which could be worth more than the van itself. The BIK also for personal would put me in the upper tax bracket so huge repayments. He floated the idea of being a sole trader rather than limited but when you work out the tax repayments when you sell it it didnt seem worth it. In end we've decided to buy personally and loan back to the company; wont be able to reclaim vat but could write a little off.
 
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I’ll confirm that Coke Cola have lost the case, a Kombi is classed as a passenger carrying vehicle.
I know a technician for Coke, has received a letter from his employer to this effect.
for reference his T5 at the time was a T32 kombi highline 140bhp, with removable storage units behind the front passenger seats, to replace the kombi rear seats. The rear had fixed fitted storage units. A very smart setup.
Coke are in discussions with HRMC to pay the owed benefit in kind, which has been back dated 4years from when the case was first investigated, the period when using these vans.
They now wiz round the country in T6 highline panel vans, fully fitted out with storage in the rear, 3 seats only!
 
just redeclared my t30 kombi to hmrc for bik purposes

shifted it from a van to a car for the above

costing me about £700 additional tax a month ( and about 200 extra to back date from december 2020) , BUT, where could i buy a brand new one, fully fuelled and expensed for that amount of money when doing 40k miles p/a?

the daily round trip to the office is 120 miles 5 x days a week!!, and thats not even including the rest of my private "" fishing "" mileage weekly :)

only 2 things certain in life
you will die in the end, and pay tax before you do so :)
 
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