Workshop 5 - Charities Aid Foundation

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Tax Can Make You Money! FANWoE - Black Development Agency Tuesday 13th July 2010

Panikos Efthimiou Training Manager – CAF (Charities Aid Foundation)


UK Giving 2009 (CAF and NCVO)  charitable giving dropped by 11% to £9.9bn  the recession has driven giving back to 2006/7 levels  regular giving is increasing but cash remains most common method of giving  54% of adults still giving…a drop of 2%, which means 774,000 fewer people giving

 only 4 in 10 donations are ‘Gift Aided’ – so £750m still remains unclaimed


Main methods of tax-efficient giving

 Gift Aid  Payroll Giving  Shares  Legacies


What is Gift Aid?

For every £1 a UK tax-paying donor gives to your charity you will still* get an extra 28p from Her Majesty’s Revenue Customs (HMRC)….. at no extra cost to the donor! * commitment from government until 2011


Gift Aid today

enables the charity to reclaim basic rate income tax (20%) = 25p on every pound donated by UK taxpayer

transitional relief (not tax relief but ‘government expenditure’) will top-up donations by 3.2 pence per pound = 28.2p

higher rate taxpaying donors can reclaim the difference


Gift Aid and Higher Rate Taxpayers Donation

Charity claims

Transitional relief

Total donation

Donor reclaims

Full potential

20% taxpayer

£100

£25.00

£3.20

£128.20

40% taxpayer

£100

£25.00

£3.20

£128.20

£25.00

£160.25

50% taxpayer

£100

£25.00

£3.20

£128.20

£37.50

£176.28

£128.20

NB Individuals that complete the self assessment form (SA100) can donate any tax repayment that is due to them directly to charity - Gift Aid can also be applied to this donation For a charity to benefit from this, they must register separately with HMRC for a SA Donate reference number


Info to higher rate taxpayers (example) GOOD NEWS…….GOOD NEWS!  “If you pay tax at either of the higher rates you can claim further tax relief in your self-assessment tax return. Please remember that you can, if you wish, donate this to charity….which the HMRC will also Gift Aid!”


Gift Aid – The Rules

donor must pay at least as much Income Tax and/or Capital Gains Tax as the charity claims back in Gift Aid from HMRC

donor must complete a Gift Aid declaration (paper or oral)

donor ‘thank you’ gifts cannot exceed HMRC’s ‘Donor Benefit Rules’


The health check

“I am a UK taxpayer and pay an amount of Income Tax and/or Capital Gains Tax at least equal to the tax that can be reclaimed on my donation(s).”


The benefits valuation rule

SINGLE DONATION

MAXIMUM BENEFIT

£0 - £100 £100 - £1,000 >£1,000 >£10,000

25% of donation £25 5% of donation £500


Examples of Gift Aid declarations

“Please treat this donation and all donations I make from the date of this declaration as Gift Aid donations unless I notify you otherwise.� Declaration for new donors


Examples of Gift Aid declarations

“Please treat all donations I’ve made during the past four years and all donations I make in the future as Gift Aid donations until I notify you otherwise.” Declaration for existing donors (retrospective claims) NB HMRC pay interest on retrospective claims!



Gift Aid can be claimed on…       

cash cheques direct debits standing orders credit/debit cards postal orders and can be made in any currency (as long as donor is a UK tax payer)


Gift Aid cannot be claimed on…

 purchase of most goods or services  eg Christmas cards and jumble sales

 raffle and lottery tickets  donations already receiving tax relief  eg charity vouchers or payroll giving

 in-kind donations


Other potential Gift Aid – greyish areas!     

sponsorship events membership events (not the admission price) auctions charity shop donations

NB the benefits valuation rule may affect any ‘gift aidable’ donation


Audit trail

Charities need to keep a clear audit trail to demonstrate to the HMRC that they have received the donations they are reclaiming tax on, as well as having the correct Gift Aid declarations.


Easy guide to Gift Aid…getting the money!  get declarations from all your UK tax-paying donors  complete new HMRC charity application form  when making a claim charity must use the new ‘intelligent’ R68 (i) which will automatically calculate repayments for you! (also available in paper form)  HMRC are also reviewing claim/repayment process i.e. how much and how often…the charity sector will be consulted!  HMRC Guidance improvement: www.direct.gov.uk/giftaid.


Useful contacts/further help for Gift Aid Institute of Fundraising www.institute-of-fundraising.org.uk www.tax-effectivegiving.org.uk Helpline: 0845 458 4586 CAF Charity Financial Services (inc Gift Aid reclaim) www.cafonline.org/charityservices 01732 520 316


What is payroll giving?

 a way of giving to charity tax free  scheme is processed by payroll giving agencies (PGA’s) to provide an audit trail and prevent fraud  all the PGA’s are listed on the HMRC website

“Costs you less to give more”


Tax effective Donor pledges

Actual cost (20%)

Actual cost (40%)

Actual cost (50%)

Charity Receives

£5.00

£4.00

£3.00

£2.50

£5.00

£10.00

£8.00

£6.00

£5.00

£10.00

£50.00

£40.00

£30.00

£25.00

£50.00

So, for example, the donor pledges £10, and the cost is either £8.00, £6.00 or £5.00 (depending on tax rate) and the charity receives £10.00 (PGA’s normally deduct a small admin fee)


An added advantage  some employers offer matching on staff donations  others will pay the administration fee – some do both  good way for employers to support staff and is an incentive to get staff to join the scheme

tax advantage

employer matching


Employer Quality Mark Awards Awarded for staff participation rates and ‘employer support’…  Bronze – 1% employee participation rate  Silver – 5% employee participation rate  Gold – 10% employee participation rate ‘Employer support’ – pay admin fees, match donations or promoted during past 12 months


What is the potential?  long-term donors  approx 724,000 individuals currently giving  24 million potential donors are paid via PAYE  there are over 2 million companies in the UK but…  only 10,000 are signed up to payroll giving


How does an employer join?

 completes two copies of the contract and one payroll registration form  sends the forms to PGA  PGA forwards payroll registration form to HMRC, signs both copies of the contract and returns one to the employer  once these are completed the company is ready to promote to employees


How does an employee join?

 fills in a form specifying their chosen charitable organisations and return it to their payroll department (or direct to charity)  deductions are made from the next available payday  stop, start and change their donation or charitable organisation whenever they wish  can give to any charitable organisation in the UK





http://england.shelter.org.uk/donate/donate_through_your_payroll/donate_through_your_payroll


Easy guide to payroll giving  register your charity with all the PGA’s in order to receive donations  if you have paid employees register your charity as an employer with a PGA  start contacting your corporate supporters (one-off donors, charity of the year partners etc)….do they have a payroll giving scheme?  practise by running an internal promotion in your own organisation


Share giving  several million people in the UK own shares worth approximately £200 billion  £100 million is given as a gift of shares to charity each year  the average share gift is worth £7000  charities can sell shares or retain for future need


A share donor…

 must be a UK tax payer to receive tax benefits  receives all the benefit (as with payroll giving)  receives Income Tax relief and potentially Capital Gains Tax relief too  should consult a financial adviser (subject to personal circumstances)


Example – 20% taxpayer  individual donates shares worth £5000 – can claim income tax relief of £1000 (20% of £5000)  so donation has cost donor £4000, while charity has been given shares worth £5000  donor will not have to pay any Capital Gains Tax having given shares to charity  personal circumstances may change this


Example – 40% taxpayer  individual donates shares worth £5000 – can claim income tax relief of £2000 (40% of £5000)  so donation has cost donor £3000, while charity has been given shares worth £5000  donor will not have to pay any Capital Gains Tax having given shares to charity

 personal circumstances may change this


Example – 50% taxpayer  individual donates shares worth £5000 – can claim income tax relief of £2500 (50% of £5000)  so donation has cost donor £2500, while charity has been given shares worth £5000  donor will not have to pay any Capital Gains Tax having given shares to charity

 personal circumstances may change this


Talking to potential shareholders     

company newsletters charity newsletters/literature specific mailings to supporters face to face with major donors financial advisers


Things to remember

    

ask if the donor is a UK tax payer consider your charity’s ethical policy keep accurate records suggest donor seeks independent financial advice don’t offer financial advice yourself…unless you are qualified to do so


Seeking help CAF 03000 123 107

www.cafonline.org/shares

HMRC 0845 302 0203

www.hmrc.gov.uk/shares

APCIMS (brokers) 020 7247 7080 www.apcims.co.uk

IFA Promotion (financial advisers) 020 7833 3131 www.ifap.org.uk ShareGift 020 7337 0501

www.sharegift.org


Legacies – leaving money to charity in a will

 also known as a bequest  inheritance tax relief  current threshold £325,000, and £650,000 for married couples or civil partnerships (frozen at this level in 2010 budget until 2014/5)

 current rate 40%

 charitable legacies (bequests) are free of inheritance tax


Legacies – key statistics • • •

they bring in £1.95bn a year to charities pecuniary legacy has average value of £3,500 residuary legacy has average value of £51,300

 while 75% of the population give during their lifetime, only 7% remember a charity in their will  can be:  money (pecuniary legacy)  specified item of value (eg jewellery, artwork, vehicle)


Legacies – motivations    

existing donor of the charity connection with the cause – themselves or others always supported (even if not a donor) to save tax, or to stop tax man getting his hands on any money  no one else to give it to  no one else needs it Of course we cannot be sure but what drives people to do this (unless each individual tells us!) but what is essential is that charities continue promoting them


Promoting legacies

 regular/committed givers  solicitor networks  special one-off events – promoted in trade magazines  www.willaid.org.uk  www.rememberacharity.org.uk


Legacies – smaller budgets

    

local contacts solicitors and trustees articles in local paper legacy stories in newsletters including legacy request in talks

don’t be in a rush – this will take time!


Other useful contacts Institute of Fundraising www.institute-of-fundraising.org.uk 020 7840 1000 Her Majesty’s Revenue & Customs www.hmrc.gov.uk/charities 0845 302 0203 CAF Charity Services www.cafonline.org/charityadmin 01732 520 316


Speak to me ď Š Panikos Efthimiou pefthimiou@cafonline.org 07720 405702 www.cafonline.org



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