The Business Exchange Swindon & Wiltshire Edition 31: June/July 2017 | Page 10
FINANCE
Hear it from the experts…
Ask AMS
Advice for small businesses
AMS Accountancy Ltd. 01793 818400
Personal insurances for business owners
The biggest danger a small business faces is the
risk of having to cease trading instantly.
When a client sets up a new business one
of the questions they ask is “What types of
insurance should we get?”
We talk about the need for public liability
Insurance, employer’s liability insurance and
professional indemnity Insurance – because
these are statutory, contractual or just good
business requirements.
However, there is a whole area that is
often ignored and that’s the area of personal
insurance – specifically, life insurance and
critical illness insurance.
This is partly because it doesn’t seem
relevant to a business, and often, for start-
ups in particular, money is tight and such
insurances seem an unaffordable luxury
rather than a necessity. Then, as the business
takes off, there is often little time to think
about such ‘personal’ matters and it gets
overlooked.
However, I think accountants and clients
need to reassess how they think about life
insurance and critical illness insurance.
The biggest danger a small business faces
is the risk of having to cease trading instantly
if the business owner dies or is out-of-action
with an injury or illness for any length of
time. A life insurance policy means that the
right sort of expertise can be hired in an
emergency – that may enable the business to
survive until the business owner recovers or
another solution can be worked out. On the
other hand, the lack of the right insurance
policy can have a devastating effect on the
business owner and their family.
On top of that, ‘relevant’ life insurance is a
type of insurance that, when applied to a key
company director, is a tax deductible expense
in a company’s accounts (and not a taxable
benefit in kind) so, effectively, it is discounted
compared to normal life insurance policies.
At the moment, I don’t believe there is an
equivalent ‘relevant’ critical illness policy that
HMRC accept as a tax deductible expense
and not a taxable benefit in kind.
So, on starting a business, it’s worth
talking to a financial advisor about these
matters, as well as to your accountant.
Can you tell me about the 24 month rule – I’m a Director of my
own Company?
Principally site based, this rule applies to tax relief on Travel and
Subsistence. If you work, or know you will work at a site for 40% plus of
your working hours for over 24 months - you are caught by the 24 month
rule and must stop claiming for travel and subsistence.
You can restart the 24 months if: you take a long break from the site or
move to another site. (See HMRC online booklet 490)
Example: Jim has a Limited Company, he works in Andover 2 days per
week (working elsewhere 3 days per week) and claims tax relief on his
travel. If his 18 month contract is extended by 9 months, he must stop
claiming for these expenses immediately. This is because he now knows he
will work there over 40% of his work time for more than 24 months! (A 6
month extension would have allowed Jim to continue to claim travel
expenses)
Peter Bromiley ACA
www.ask-ams.co.uk
@AMSAccountancy
Peter Bromiley ACA
Partner
www.ams-accountancy.co.uk
NO NONSENSE TELECOMS...
THERE’S A WORLD OF CHANGE...
occurring across the telecoms industry right
now. Technology is moving at such a pace that
it’s tough for any busy business owner to keep
up with – let alone fully understand it all.
Fundamentally though, if you use landline
telephones within your business, you’re going
to want some basics in place. Reliability,
cost efficiency, practicality, simplicity and
no-nonsense, rapid, customer service when
the unexpected happens- which of course it
occasionally does.
Fluid Network Solutions (Wessex) is the
first franchised office of its successful head
office namesake telecoms company, based
in Shropshire. Fluid, founded in 2003 has
developed a true specialism within the
marketplace by offering telephony solutions
to clients for whom reliability of service is an
absolute must. With more competitive pricing
alongside a personalised UK based customer
service team, they have a proven history of
maintaining long standing client relationships.
Ethical business ethos
Will Job, who has 20 years experience in the
industry, along with his partner Carol, who
together purchased the franchise covering
Wiltshire and Somerset territories said, “I was
very impressed by Fluid Network Solutions,
particularly with the ethos of its founder, Rob
Tolley. He has developed an honest and ethical
company in a market sector where many of the
operators often work to very low standards,
tying clients up in punitive contracts, or with
extortionate out of contract tariffs.”
“We operate a far more relaxed approach to
prospective clients, taking time to carry out
a free, no obligation audit of their current
telecoms spending in the first instance - simply
to establish how or indeed if, we can help.”
Great savings
“On average, Fluid generates savings of around
30% on lines and calls when a client transfers.
We supply directly through the BT network to
ensure delivery of the highest quality products
and simply avoid tying clients into long, unfair
agreements. Our standard product is in fact
just a 30 day rolling contract – such is our faith
in what we offer. We’ve also passed on 11 tariff
reductions in the last 3 years too.”
Alongside a whole range of clients, from single-
line users to large multi-sites companies, Fluid
also works with over 100 NHS medical and
dental surgeries across the UK providing critical
resources and telephony solutions.
Contact Will on 0333 222 0066
or email [email protected] for a chat or to arrange a visit and free audit.
www.fluidnetworksolutions.co.uk | Follow us: @fluidnetwork_WS
10
THE BUSINESS EXCHANGE 2017