Saffery Champness issues word of caution regarding farming losses

Saffery Champness said it is a "very complex" area which has been tested a number of times at the Tax Tribunal
Saffery Champness said it is a "very complex" area which has been tested a number of times at the Tax Tribunal

Chartered accountants Saffery Champness has issued out a word of caution regarding losses arising from farming.

Sideways loss relief can be used where losses, arising from a trade undertaken on a commercial basis and with a view to making a profit, can be offset against other income arising in the same or previous tax year, thereby reducing an individual’s liability to income tax.

Losses can also be carried forward and automatically offset against the first profits arising from the same trade, in the absence of any other claims, but not against future other income.

There is, however, a restriction on the amount of losses that can be offset against other income in a given tax year, the limit being the greater of £50,000 or 25 per cent of an individual’s adjusted net income.

The hobby farming rules also introduce further restrictions on the use of losses arising from farming. After 5 successive years, sideways loss relief will usually be denied for any losses made in year 6, and these can then only be carried forward for use against future farming profits. Stud farms can be an exception to the rule, where the limit may be extended to 11 years of consecutive losses.

Complications also arise where the farm’s accounting year and the tax year do not match. In such instances, not only can the aligned result look very different, but in some cases the restriction regarding the number of years can also kick in a year earlier than anticipated.

An exemption is available from the 5-year restriction where farming activities meet the reasonable expectation of profit test, and where a competent farmer carrying on farming activities in the current year would reasonably expect future profits but could not over the previous five years have expected their activities to become profitable until after the end of the current tax year.

Martyn Dobinson, Director of Saffery Champness, said it is a "very complex" area which has been tested a number of times at the Tax Tribunal, with victories for the tax payer being "few and far between".

"The ‘hobby farming’ rules still apply in the case of unforeseen and one-off events, such as poor weather and disease, and market factors are not an acceptable argument for longer term losses being made," Mr Dobinson said.

"It should be noted also that the losses clock is re-set by a year of profit. However, transferring the business between spouses, or to or from limited companies, cannot, due to anti-avoidance rules, restart the clock."