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<!-- Unsourced image removed: ] was the ] who introduced ], and with it the concept of an accounting period in ].]] -->An '''accounting period''' is a period with reference to which ] is charged. It helps dictate when tax is paid on income and gains. An accounting period begins whenever a company comes within the corporation tax charge, and whenever an accounting period ends without the company ceasing to be within the charge. There are a number of rules about when an accounting period ends, and we look at each of these in turn below. The rule is that an accounting period ends on the earliest of the events listed below. An accounting period cannot last longer than 12 months. However, there is no minimum period of time for which an accounting period will last: in theory there can be one lasting just a nanosecond, or even only an instant. An '''accounting period''' is a period with reference to which ] is charged<ref>Section 12 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>. It helps dictate when tax is paid on income and gains. An accounting period begins whenever a company comes within the corporation tax charge, and whenever an accounting period ends without the company ceasing to be within the charge. There are a number of rules about when an accounting period ends, and we look at each of these below.


Often an accounting period coincides with a companies period of account. This is the period for which it draws up accounts<ref>Section 832(1) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>, except for a life assurance company, where it is the period for which it draws up its periodical return<ref>Section 431 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>. However, periods of account and accounting periods do not necessarily coincide.
==After 12 months==


==Basic rules==
An accounting period ends on the passing of 12 months from the beginning of the accounting period. Most companies prepare accounts for a 12 month period anyway, in which case this date is the same as the next one listed. However, if a company has an 18 month period of account (ie prepares accounts for an 18 month period), it will usually have one 12 month accounting period followed by a 6 month period.


An accounting period begins when<ref>Section 12(2) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>:
The rule prevents the tax payment date being delayed indefinitely - particularly in the instance of an overseas company with a UK permanent establishment which is in a jurisdiction that does not require the preparation of accounts.


*the company comes within the charge to corporation tax;
Some companies draw up their accounts for a 52, and in some years, 53 week period, for instance, if they want their accounts always to be drawn up to a particular day of the week. Under normal application of these rules, some years these companies will have a 52 week accounting period, and in others a 12 month accounting period followed by a short accounting period of up to 4 days. A company in this position can choose to treat these periods as though they are 12 month periods, except chargeable gains purposes, and for determining in which year capital allowances (tax depreciation) can be claimed.
*an accounting period of the company ends, and the company is still within the charge to corporation tax; or
*the company does not currently have an accounting period and has a chargeable gain or allowable loss<ref>Section 12(6) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>.


An accounting period ends on the earliest of the following<ref>Section 12(3) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>:
Some retail co-operate societies prepare half-yearly or quarterly accounts. Without any concession they would have four accounting periods each year, with all the incumbent tax administration problems. Therefore there is a concession that such associations have 12 month accounting periods instead (subject to one of the other reasons for bringing an end to an accounting period occurring first).


*the expiration of 12 months from the beginning of the accounting period;
==An accounting date==
*an accounting date of the company or, if there is a period for which the company does not draw up accounts, the end of that period;
*the company beginning or ceasing to trade or to be, in respect of the trade or (if more than one) of all trades carried on by it, within the charge to corporation tax;
*the company beginning or ceasing to be UK resident;
*the company ceasing to be within the charge to corporation tax.


There are further rules to deal with windings up, life assurance companies and lessor companies.
An accounting period ends on an accounting date of a company or, if there is a period for which the company does not make up accounts, the end of that period. The accounting date of a company is the date to which it draws up accounts.


A UK-resident company is treated as coming within the charge to corporation tax (if it has not already come within the charge to corporation tax) when it commences to carry on business<ref>Section 12(4) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>.
The first part of the rule is there because it makes a natural reference point for the tax computations - which apply to the profits of a period. The second part of the rule is there as it means that the next accounting period of the company can coincide with the period for which the company's accounts are drawn up to (subject to the other rules for bringing an end to an accounting period apply.


==Example==
==Beginning or ceasing to trade==


Suppose ABC Ltd, a UK resident company is incorporated on 1 August 20X1. It acquires a source of income (an interest-bearing bank account) on 1 September 20X1 and commences trading on 1 October 20X1 and continues trading throughout all other periods under review. It draws up its accounts for the following periods:
An accounting period ends when a company begins or ceases to trade or to be, in respect of the trade or (if more than one) of all the trades carried on by it, within the charge to corporation tax.


:1 August 20X1 to 31 December 20X1
Trading companies, which form the bulk of active companies, are taxed differently from all sorts of other company. In particular they can claim a deduction for expenses that are incurred wholly and exclusively for the purposes of the trade and which don't constitute capital expenditure. It is therefore appropriate to start a new accounting period when a company begins to trade (so that the trading profits computation has a convenient and sensiblle start date) and to end one when it ceases to trade.
:1 January 20X2 to 31 December 20X2
:1 January 20X3 to 30 June 20X3
:1 July 20X3 to 31 December 20X4


Then ABC Ltd would have the following accounting periods:
==Beginning or ceasing to be UK resident==


:1 September 20X1 to 30 September 20X1 (from when it came into charge to corporation tax to the commencement of trade)
Companies are within the charge to corporation tax if they are UK resident or if they trade through a permanent establishment within the UK and have income or gains chargeable to corporation tax. A UK resident company is charged to corporation tax on its worldwide profits. However, a non-UK resident company trading through a UK permanent establishment is charged to corporation tax only on the profits attributable to that permanent establishment.
:1 October 20X1 to 31 December 20X1 (to the end of a period of account)
:1 January 20X2 to 31 December 20X2 (to the end of a period of account)
:1 January 20X3 to 30 June 20X3 (to the end of a period of account)
:1 July 20X3 to 30 June 20X4 (to the expiry of 12 months)
:1 July 20X4 to 31 December 20X4 (to the end of a period of account)


==Company with more than one trade==
It is therefore convenient for an accounting period to end if a company moves between those two statuses.


If a company carrying on more than one trade draws up accounts of any of them to different dates, and does not make up general accounts for the whole of the company's activities, the company may determine that any one of those dates shall be taken into consideration for the purposes of determining whether an accounting period has ended under the rule in the second bullet point above<ref>Section 12(5) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>.
==Ceasing to be within the charge==


If, however, the Board of HMRC is of the opinion, on reasonable grounds, that the date so chosen by the company is inappropriate, they may, if it is reasonable to do so, give notice that the accounting date of another of the company's trades should be used instead<ref>Section 12(5A) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>.
An accounting period ends when a company ceases to be within the charge to corporation tax. It is clearly convenient to end an accounting period from the date when the charge to corporation tax ceases. nnnnnnn


==Mean accounting date==
==Winding up==


Some companies draw up financial statements to the same day of the week, a Sunday, say, each year. They will therefore have 364 day (52 week) or 371 day (53 week) periods of account. As long as the company draws its accounts up to within four days of a mean accounting date each year, it may, for the purposes of determining its accounting periods, deem its accounts to be drawn up for a twelve month period. For example, when there is a 371 day period of account, instead of having one accounting period of 365 days (in a non-leap year) and another of 6 days, it will prepare its return on the assumption that the period of account was 365 days long.<ref>ICEAW Technical Release 500</ref>
An accounting period ends on the commencement of a winding up (in which case, thereafter an accounting period can only end on the expiration on 12 months or by the conclusion of the winding up. Once a company commences a winding up it is no longer in control of its directors, but instead of its liquidators. It will also stop trading. Special legal rules deal with how a winding up should proceed, and tax rules have been developed to deal with that circumstance. It is convenient, for these purposes, for an accounting period to end on winding up and only end on the expiry of 12 months or the conclusion of the winding up.


==Inspector determining the accounting period==
==Transfer of life assurance business==


Where it appears to the tax inspector that the beginning or end of any accounting period is uncertain, he may make an assessment on the company for such period, not exceeding 12 months, as appears to him appropriate. In that event, that period is treated for all purposes as an accounting period unless the inspector sees fit to revise it as a result of receiving further facts, or on an appeal against the assessment in respect of some other matter the company shows the true accounting periods. If on an appeal against an assessment made under this rule the company shows the true accounting periods, the assessment appealed against has effect as an assessment or assessments for the true accounting periods, and assessments may be made for any such periods as might have been made at the time when the assessment appealed against was made. <ref>Section 12(8) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>
An accounting period of a life assurer ends when it transfers some or all of its life assurance business to another company. Life assurance companies may write different types of business, such as Basic Life Assurance and General Annuity Business and Pension Business. The different types of business are taxed in different ways. To make the determination of how much investment return is allocated to each category of business easier, an accounting period ends when a company transfers some or all of its business to another company.


==Administration and winding up==
==Reference==

===Administration===

An accounting period ends immediately before the day a company enters into administration. For this purpose a company enters administration when it enters administration under Schedule B1 to the Insolvency Act 1986 or is subject to any corresponding procedure otherwise than under that Act (for example, in an overseas jurisdiction). <ref>Section 12(7ZA) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>.

An accounting period ends when a company ceases to be in administration<ref>Section 12(3)(da) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>. For these purposes a company ceases to be in administration when it ceases to be in administration under Schedule B1 to the Insolvency Act 1986 or any corresponding event occurs otherwise than under that Act<ref>Section 12(5B) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref> (for example, in an overseas jurisdiction).

===Winding up===

An accounting period ends and a new one begins with the commencement of a winding up. For this purpose a winding up is taken to commence on the passing of a resolution for the winding up of the company, or on the presentation of a winding up petition if no such resolution has previously been passed and a winding up order is made on the petition, or on the doing of any other act for a like purpose in the case of a winding up otherwise than under the Insolvency Act 1986. <ref>Section 12(7) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>

After this, an accounting period does not end other than by the expiration of 12 months from its beginning or by the completion of the winding up<ref>Section 12(7) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>. However, if the company later enters administration, this rule is disapplied from that point (and with an accounting period ending because the company has entered into administration)<ref>Section 12(7ZA) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>.

During the course of a winding up, a company may make an estimate of when it will be wound up so that it can prepare tax returns for its final accounting period before that period ends. If the date assumed for the winding up turns out to be before the actual winding up, then an accounting period ends on the date assumed for the winding up, a new accounting period starts, and the immediately preceding paragraph applies as if the winding up had started with that accounting period. <ref>Section 342(6) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>.

==Cooperatives preparing quarterly and half-yearly accounts==

HMRC will, under certain conditions, allow cooperatives that prepare quarterly and half-yearly accounts to merge a number of periods of account for tax purposes so that they have only accounting date each year<ref>Extra-statutory concession C12</ref>.

==Life assurance companies==

Additionally, there are special rules that apply to life assurance companies from which life assurance business is transferred under and insurance business transfer scheme. Different rules apply depending on whether section 444AA of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 applies. For transfers before 1 January 2007, s444AA applies where the whole of the transferor's long-term insurance business is being transferred and the company. It is proposed that the Finance Bill 2007 will amend this for transfers on or after 1 January, so that section 444AA applies where the whole or substantially the whole of the transferor's long-term insurance business is transferred, in which case the transfer time is taken to be the time some business is first transferred<ref>See draft legislation released by HMRC on 6 December 2006</ref>.

If section 444AA does not apply, an accounting period of the transferor company ends with the day of the transfer<ref>Section 12(7A) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>.

If section 444AA applies, an accounting period of the transferor company ends immediately before the transfer, and the transferor also has an accounting period covering the instant of the transfer (except for the purposes of calculating the equalisation provision for tax purposes)<refSection 12(7C) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>.

===Example where s444AA applies===

Suppose a transferor company, XYZ Life Ltd, has in the past prepared periodical returns for a period encompassing the calendar year. It transfers the whole of its business at 11.59pm on 31 December 20X1, after which it retains some cash on deposit. It agrees with the Financial Services Authority that it does not need to prepare a periodical return for 20X1.

XYZ Life Ltd will have the following accounting periods in 20X1:

:1 January 20X1 to immediately before the transfer of business
:An accounting period covering the instant of the transfer (11.59pm on 31 December 20X1)
:An accounting period covering the period beginning immediately after the transfer to midnight on 31 December 20X1

==Lessor companies==

If a company carries on a business of leasing plant or machinery, is within the charge to corporation tax in respect of the business and there is a qualifying change of ownership in relation to the company, then an accounting period of the company ends on the day of that qualifying change in ownership, and a new accounting period begins on the following day. There are exceptions to this in Paragraph 40.<ref>Paragraphs 3, 33, 40 Schedule 10 to the Finance Act 2006</ref>

==Partial deeming provisions==

Other provisions in the Taxes Acts sometimes deem there to be accounting periods for specific purposes only. This is typically on the introduction of new legislation. For example, when section 75 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 was replaced as a result of the Finance Act 2004, companies, if necessary, deemed themselves to have an accounting period ending on 31 March 2004 for the purposes of calculating management expenses that they were entitled to under the rules applying pre-1 April 2004 and post-31 March 2004.

==References==
<references/>


*Section 12 of the ''Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988''


] ]

Revision as of 17:46, 26 December 2006

An accounting period is a period with reference to which United Kingdom corporation tax is charged. It helps dictate when tax is paid on income and gains. An accounting period begins whenever a company comes within the corporation tax charge, and whenever an accounting period ends without the company ceasing to be within the charge. There are a number of rules about when an accounting period ends, and we look at each of these below.

Often an accounting period coincides with a companies period of account. This is the period for which it draws up accounts, except for a life assurance company, where it is the period for which it draws up its periodical return. However, periods of account and accounting periods do not necessarily coincide.

Basic rules

An accounting period begins when:

  • the company comes within the charge to corporation tax;
  • an accounting period of the company ends, and the company is still within the charge to corporation tax; or
  • the company does not currently have an accounting period and has a chargeable gain or allowable loss.

An accounting period ends on the earliest of the following:

  • the expiration of 12 months from the beginning of the accounting period;
  • an accounting date of the company or, if there is a period for which the company does not draw up accounts, the end of that period;
  • the company beginning or ceasing to trade or to be, in respect of the trade or (if more than one) of all trades carried on by it, within the charge to corporation tax;
  • the company beginning or ceasing to be UK resident;
  • the company ceasing to be within the charge to corporation tax.

There are further rules to deal with windings up, life assurance companies and lessor companies.

A UK-resident company is treated as coming within the charge to corporation tax (if it has not already come within the charge to corporation tax) when it commences to carry on business.

Example

Suppose ABC Ltd, a UK resident company is incorporated on 1 August 20X1. It acquires a source of income (an interest-bearing bank account) on 1 September 20X1 and commences trading on 1 October 20X1 and continues trading throughout all other periods under review. It draws up its accounts for the following periods:

1 August 20X1 to 31 December 20X1
1 January 20X2 to 31 December 20X2
1 January 20X3 to 30 June 20X3
1 July 20X3 to 31 December 20X4

Then ABC Ltd would have the following accounting periods:

1 September 20X1 to 30 September 20X1 (from when it came into charge to corporation tax to the commencement of trade)
1 October 20X1 to 31 December 20X1 (to the end of a period of account)
1 January 20X2 to 31 December 20X2 (to the end of a period of account)
1 January 20X3 to 30 June 20X3 (to the end of a period of account)
1 July 20X3 to 30 June 20X4 (to the expiry of 12 months)
1 July 20X4 to 31 December 20X4 (to the end of a period of account)

Company with more than one trade

If a company carrying on more than one trade draws up accounts of any of them to different dates, and does not make up general accounts for the whole of the company's activities, the company may determine that any one of those dates shall be taken into consideration for the purposes of determining whether an accounting period has ended under the rule in the second bullet point above.

If, however, the Board of HMRC is of the opinion, on reasonable grounds, that the date so chosen by the company is inappropriate, they may, if it is reasonable to do so, give notice that the accounting date of another of the company's trades should be used instead.

Mean accounting date

Some companies draw up financial statements to the same day of the week, a Sunday, say, each year. They will therefore have 364 day (52 week) or 371 day (53 week) periods of account. As long as the company draws its accounts up to within four days of a mean accounting date each year, it may, for the purposes of determining its accounting periods, deem its accounts to be drawn up for a twelve month period. For example, when there is a 371 day period of account, instead of having one accounting period of 365 days (in a non-leap year) and another of 6 days, it will prepare its return on the assumption that the period of account was 365 days long.

Inspector determining the accounting period

Where it appears to the tax inspector that the beginning or end of any accounting period is uncertain, he may make an assessment on the company for such period, not exceeding 12 months, as appears to him appropriate. In that event, that period is treated for all purposes as an accounting period unless the inspector sees fit to revise it as a result of receiving further facts, or on an appeal against the assessment in respect of some other matter the company shows the true accounting periods. If on an appeal against an assessment made under this rule the company shows the true accounting periods, the assessment appealed against has effect as an assessment or assessments for the true accounting periods, and assessments may be made for any such periods as might have been made at the time when the assessment appealed against was made.

Administration and winding up

Administration

An accounting period ends immediately before the day a company enters into administration. For this purpose a company enters administration when it enters administration under Schedule B1 to the Insolvency Act 1986 or is subject to any corresponding procedure otherwise than under that Act (for example, in an overseas jurisdiction). .

An accounting period ends when a company ceases to be in administration. For these purposes a company ceases to be in administration when it ceases to be in administration under Schedule B1 to the Insolvency Act 1986 or any corresponding event occurs otherwise than under that Act (for example, in an overseas jurisdiction).

Winding up

An accounting period ends and a new one begins with the commencement of a winding up. For this purpose a winding up is taken to commence on the passing of a resolution for the winding up of the company, or on the presentation of a winding up petition if no such resolution has previously been passed and a winding up order is made on the petition, or on the doing of any other act for a like purpose in the case of a winding up otherwise than under the Insolvency Act 1986.

After this, an accounting period does not end other than by the expiration of 12 months from its beginning or by the completion of the winding up. However, if the company later enters administration, this rule is disapplied from that point (and with an accounting period ending because the company has entered into administration).

During the course of a winding up, a company may make an estimate of when it will be wound up so that it can prepare tax returns for its final accounting period before that period ends. If the date assumed for the winding up turns out to be before the actual winding up, then an accounting period ends on the date assumed for the winding up, a new accounting period starts, and the immediately preceding paragraph applies as if the winding up had started with that accounting period. .

Cooperatives preparing quarterly and half-yearly accounts

HMRC will, under certain conditions, allow cooperatives that prepare quarterly and half-yearly accounts to merge a number of periods of account for tax purposes so that they have only accounting date each year.

Life assurance companies

Additionally, there are special rules that apply to life assurance companies from which life assurance business is transferred under and insurance business transfer scheme. Different rules apply depending on whether section 444AA of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 applies. For transfers before 1 January 2007, s444AA applies where the whole of the transferor's long-term insurance business is being transferred and the company. It is proposed that the Finance Bill 2007 will amend this for transfers on or after 1 January, so that section 444AA applies where the whole or substantially the whole of the transferor's long-term insurance business is transferred, in which case the transfer time is taken to be the time some business is first transferred.

If section 444AA does not apply, an accounting period of the transferor company ends with the day of the transfer.

If section 444AA applies, an accounting period of the transferor company ends immediately before the transfer, and the transferor also has an accounting period covering the instant of the transfer (except for the purposes of calculating the equalisation provision for tax purposes)<refSection 12(7C) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988</ref>.

Example where s444AA applies

Suppose a transferor company, XYZ Life Ltd, has in the past prepared periodical returns for a period encompassing the calendar year. It transfers the whole of its business at 11.59pm on 31 December 20X1, after which it retains some cash on deposit. It agrees with the Financial Services Authority that it does not need to prepare a periodical return for 20X1.

XYZ Life Ltd will have the following accounting periods in 20X1:

1 January 20X1 to immediately before the transfer of business
An accounting period covering the instant of the transfer (11.59pm on 31 December 20X1)
An accounting period covering the period beginning immediately after the transfer to midnight on 31 December 20X1

Lessor companies

If a company carries on a business of leasing plant or machinery, is within the charge to corporation tax in respect of the business and there is a qualifying change of ownership in relation to the company, then an accounting period of the company ends on the day of that qualifying change in ownership, and a new accounting period begins on the following day. There are exceptions to this in Paragraph 40.

Partial deeming provisions

Other provisions in the Taxes Acts sometimes deem there to be accounting periods for specific purposes only. This is typically on the introduction of new legislation. For example, when section 75 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 was replaced as a result of the Finance Act 2004, companies, if necessary, deemed themselves to have an accounting period ending on 31 March 2004 for the purposes of calculating management expenses that they were entitled to under the rules applying pre-1 April 2004 and post-31 March 2004.

References

  1. Section 12 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  2. Section 832(1) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  3. Section 431 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  4. Section 12(2) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  5. Section 12(6) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  6. Section 12(3) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  7. Section 12(4) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  8. Section 12(5) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  9. Section 12(5A) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  10. ICEAW Technical Release 500
  11. Section 12(8) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  12. Section 12(7ZA) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  13. Section 12(3)(da) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  14. Section 12(5B) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  15. Section 12(7) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  16. Section 12(7) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  17. Section 12(7ZA) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  18. Section 342(6) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  19. Extra-statutory concession C12
  20. See draft legislation released by HMRC on 6 December 2006
  21. Section 12(7A) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
  22. Paragraphs 3, 33, 40 Schedule 10 to the Finance Act 2006
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