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Accountancy firms are increasingly recognising the significant potential of providing their clients with an in-house R&D tax claims service. Not only does it offer an additional revenue stream at a time when margins for compliance services are being eroded, but it is a service that clients are actively looking for from someone they consider a trusted advisor.

With the rumoured complexity of the claims process – and with HMRC clamping down on risky and potentially rogue claims – it is understandable that some firms may continue to be daunted by the thought of embarking down this route. However, understanding your clients’ eligibility (whether you’re an accountancy firm or a specialist consultancy) is a straightforward process, as long as you break it down into three simple steps.

HMRC eligibility

Before firms can start to review their client (and/ or prospect) base for potential R&D tax claimants, it’s important to understand the key criteria HMRC stipulates.

1.The work is in an area of science or technology

This is the most basic criteria for eligibility. The work must be being carried out in an area of science or technology. If you can’t relate your client’s work to one or more areas of science or technology, it’s not eligible. It’s also important to note that research carried out in an area of social science isn’t eligible.

2.The work is structured as a project

HMRC defines an R&D project as a ‘number of activities conducted to a method or plans in order to achieve an advance in science or technology’ It also states that a project ‘may be part of a larger commercial project’ So what does this mean for your client and their tax claim? Essentially, your client must have planned their work and have set out to achieve an advance, rather than just doing day to day work and stumbling across it.

3.The work seeks to make an advance in science or technology

So what is an advance in science or technology?

It’s as simple as it sounds – the outcome of the project represents an increase in overall knowledge, however small, in an area of science or technology. However, applying this to the work done by a company can be more complicated. HMRC lists four areas of activity in which a company might seek to make an advance and are therefore eligible for R&D tax relief:

● work that seeks to extend overall knowledge in a field of science or technology;

● work that seeks to create a process, material, device, product or service which incorporates an increase in overall knowledge or capability in a field of science or technology;

● work that seeks to make an improvement to an existing process through scientific or technological change; and

● work that seeks to duplicate an existing material, device, product or service in an improved way using science or technology.

4.The company encountered technological uncertainty during the project

Simply put, a project has technological uncertainty if your client was unsure at the outset whether it was technically possible to achieve the desired end result. This usually involves some level of both commercial and financial risk, and experienced staff scratching their heads!

5.The company used competent professionals in the area of science or technology to carry out the work

This is as straightforward as it sounds. HMRC wants to be sure that the project was challenging for people with qualifications and experience in the area of science or technology!

Step1:Review the client base

The first step in establishing a claims review service is to undertake an eligibility review. There are three distinct categories of companies that a firm needs to consider – and each involve quite distinct ways of identifying eligibility.

Category 1: Clients and prospects already claiming R&D tax relief: Clients that are currently claiming are just that: companies that have made a claim for a recent financial year, and for whom the most recent claim year is still available. This is by far the easiest category to assess for eligibility. The main issues to think about here are:

● Who prepared their most recent claim? Your company or a third-party?

● If the claim was prepared by a third-party, are you happy with the eligibility of the claim?

● Was the recent work claimed for ongoing, or a one-off?

Category 2: Clients that have claimed in the past but are not currently claiming:

It is important to understand why your clients are in this position. In some cases, companies will know that they are not undertaking eligible R&D; in others, they may feel that previous claims were too small to justify the work involved in preparing the claim (note that automated R&D tax claims software can help here). It may be that there have been changes in the company structure or management, and making a claim for R&D tax relief has dropped off their radar. However, it can also be the case that a company had a bad experience with a third-party provider during their last claim.

In general, once you’ve identified which of your clients fall into this group, it’s a fairly simple process to assess whether they’re likely to be eligible. Having claimed in the past, these companies are also likely to have some understanding of the types of work that they can claim for, and so should be able to work with you to ascertain whether they’ve undertaken any of that type of work more recently.

Category 3: Clients that have never claimed R&D tax relief:

This category includes prospective clients for whom you don’t hold information about their R&D claim history. Assessing these clients for eligibility isn’t easy but there are ways to use information you already hold to make it a lot easier. The aim of this analysis is to enable you to focus your efforts on the clients most likely to be able to make a claim for R&D tax relief.

Ways to achieve this initial analysis include:

● SIC (standard industrial classification) code segmentation: how likely it is that a company operating in that sector would be carrying out eligible R&D?; and

● identifying indicators of R&D in annual accounts, such as grants received, large subcontractor costs, increase in raw materials spending and costs linked to patent applications.

Step2:Tackling obvious and less obvious cases

Obvious R&D cases will typically tick most or all of HMRC’s eligibility criteria: for example, they operate in a technical sector; employ technical staff; have costs attributed to R&D in their accounts; have made successful R&D claims in the past; or are a technical start-up.

However, companies with large R&D costs and obvious eligibility will have found themselves regularly targeted by third party R&D consultancies, potentially leading to R&D sales ‘fatigue’. The key here is to emphasise how your role as a trusted

advisor can provide them with a more tailored and appropriate service than third parties, whether this is through your fee structure or the way you work with them to prepare the claim.

A less obvious R&D case will usually tick one or two of the boxes described above, but it may be difficult to make a definite decision about the company’s eligibility without talking to its management team. It’s also important to manage your client’s expectations – you don’t want to lead a company to believe that they will be able to claim R&D tax relief before establishing eligibility.

However, again, your position as the company’s accountant can be incredibly valuable. You’re already in regular contact with the client and will be able to ask questions about R&D without having to sell services upfront.

Step3:Assess risk

In terms of R&D tax relief claims, the eligibility of a claim and the risk of the claim being investigated by HMRC are not directly related. In fact, the risk of a claim being investigated by HMRC has a lot more to do with certain other factors than eligibility, which is why it is important to think about the risk of submitting a claim alongside assessing its overall eligibility. However, if you’re not convinced about the eligibility of a claim, you should never submit the claim to HMRC, regardless of how low you feel the risk is!

The purpose of the risk assessment is to allow you to proactively mitigate the risks inherent in any eligible claim, and to prepare yourself and the client for HMRC’s response in the case of highrisk claims. The most common risk factors that may lead to HMRC investigating a claim include: company sector; ratio of claim size to company turnover; company age; grants; complications from company structure; and the amount of technical narrative included within the project details.

Having access to dedicated R&D tax claims software that includes a risk assessment, especially if it is backed by a claims support team, can be helpful in supporting you and your clients in this final step.

Conclusion

These steps can steer you in the right direction and give you confidence that your claim is robust before submission to HMRC. Understanding R&D tax claims eligibility and providing clients with a trusted R&D tax service is readily achievable and doesn’t need to be a complex or costly undertaking. With companies of all sizes actively seeking support from their accountants to fulfil this role, it is a potential revenue stream and valueadded service that cannot be ignored, and with the right support isn’t as challenging to deliver as you might have imagined.

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