HM Revenue & Customs

1050 - Cash Basis Accounting Short

Overview

You can use cash basis for 2017 to 2018 if you:

You can start using cash basis from 6 April 2014. But you can also decide you don't want to use cash basis as it may not suit your business.

Why use cash basis

If you run a small business, cash basis accounting may suit you better than traditional accounting.

This is because you only need to declare money when it comes in and out of your business. At the end of the tax year, you won't have to pay Income Tax on money you didn't receive in your accounting period.

When cash basis might not suit your business

Cash basis probably won't suit you if you:

Income and expenses under cash basis

Examples of allowable business expenses when you use the cash basis are:

Capital allowances
If you use cash basis accounting and buy a car for your business, you can claim this as a capital allowance. However, all other items you buy and keep for your business should be claimed as allowable expenses in the normal way.

Other considerations

If you're using cash basis and your business grows during the tax year you can stay in the scheme up to an income of £162,000. Above that you'll need to use traditional accounting for your Income Tax return for the next tax year, unless your income drops back below the VAT threshold in place at the end of that tax year.

Losses

Who can't use the scheme

Businesses that can't use the scheme are:

If you can't use cash basis, you'll need to use traditional accounting to work out your taxable profits.