ÀÏ˾»úÎçÒ¹¸£Àû

Non-qualifying distributions

Produced by a Tolley Personal Tax expert
Personal Tax
Guidance

Non-qualifying distributions

Produced by a Tolley Personal Tax expert
Personal Tax
Guidance
imgtext

Historically, non-qualifying distributions were distributions that did not qualify for a dividend tax credit. This was usually because they could be structured to be paid out of capital rather than out of profits.

Non-qualifying distributions have always been relatively rare in practice, as the legislation operates as low-level anti-avoidance to deter this type of distribution. If the taxpayer has received a non-qualifying distribution, it should have been identified as such on the dividend voucher received from the company.

Although the dividend tax credit was abolished with effect from 6 April 2016, and the term ‘non-qualifying distributions’ was repealed, this is still a helpful conceptual term to use when thinking about certain distributions that:

  1. •

    fall to be treated as dividend income rather than as capital, and

  2. •

    require income tax relief where they are later linked to a ‘qualifying’ distribution

Therefore, the guidance below still uses the term ‘non-qualifying distributions’ as a catch-all term for these types of distributions. However, the post-April 2016 legislation refers to these types of distributions as ‘CD distributions’, meaning that these are distributions

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

Popular Articles

Residential property and capital allowances

Residential property and capital allowancesResidential property ― plant and machinery allowancesOrdinary residential property does not, and never has, qualified for capital allowances. as CAA 2001, s 35 denies plant allowances for expenditure incurred in providing plant or machinery for use in a

14 Jul 2020 17:14 | Produced by Tolley in association with Martin Wilson and Steven Bone Read more Read more

Company cars

Company carsIntroductionCompany cars are one of the most common taxable benefits. The rules for calculating the benefit are complex, and the reporting requirements are more onerous than most benefits. Company cars are covered by very specific legislation. Detailed guidance on each of the following

14 Jul 2020 11:15 | Produced by Tolley Read more Read more

Class 1 v Class 1A

Class 1 v Class 1AClass 1 and Class 1AClass 1 and Class 1A are the categories of NIC that can be charged on expenses reimbursed and benefits provided to employees. These classes are mutually exclusive. A benefit cannot be subject to both Class 1 and Class 1A NIC. Three requirements must be met

Read more Read more