A key tax allowance in the transport sector is the subject of confusion as a result of an error at HMRC, says RHA
The Road Haulage Association has a historical agreement over the payment of a round sum allowance to those drivers who use sleeper cabs whilst on a business journey.
The agreement simply requires the employer to be satisfied the driver is away from his normal base and therefore sleeping in his cab
HMRC has been telling hauliers that in addition to the above they need to get proof of purchases from their drivers if they are going to pay an overnight subsistence allowance up to the rate agreed with the RHA – but that is quite wrong. There is no change to the system. Drivers have to be genuinely away in their cabs overnight – in a genuine subsistence positon – but nothing further is required.
“We have confirmation of that from HMRC,” says Jack Semple, RHA director of policy, “but HMRC inspectors have, in some cases, been imposing new demands on hauliers. And the website has been incorrect. It should have been put right immediately and we have made that point to HMRC.
“The overnight subsistence payment is a proper recognition of the realities of the road haulage industry – a sector that is vital to the UK economy – and HMRC should not be seeking to add to the burden of red tape in the way that it functions. More to the point, it has agreed not to do so – but appears to have failed to communicate that internally. I fear that many hauliers, from the smallest to the very large, may have been told there are changes when there are none; that a more complicated system is being imposed, when that is not the case,” Semple said.