R & D Explained

Research & Development Tax Credits are a UK tax break aimed at encouraging companies to spend more on R&D activities, which the government believes are beneficial to the UK exonomy.

The benefit is received as a corporation tax refund or as a reduction in corporation tax payable.

Claims are submitted alongside the corporation tax return and can be made up to 2 years after the end of the period to which they relate. Many qualifying companies use the benefit to invest in further R&D activities, but they can be used for anything, which includes paying out dividends.

Broadly speaking, a project qualifies if it constitutes an “advance” in science and technology, which is defined as an improvement in overall knowledge and capability in a technical field.

A key factor in determining if a project qualifies is if uncertainty exists around the end outcome. This would typically be the case where you are attempting something that no others have achieved previously. Even successful projects can qualify for R&D tax credits.

As you would expect though, HMRC have some faily detailed guidelines on what constitutes R&D.

We’ve summarised the key criteria

Technical Uncertainty

If the project presented issues that your competent professionals were unsure they would be able to overcome…

Innovation

If the project if finding a solution that is not readily available in the market, then it points to possible R&D.

Cost

If a project incurs a significant amount of expenditure (+£50k) on skilled resource, then there’s a posibility there will be R&D involved.

Qualifications

If your project requires the expertise from knowledgeable employees and/or subcontractors that hold formal qualifications then it could constitute

Here are a few typical R&D costs.

These are just some of the most common types of qualifying expenditure. The full list is extensive and very much dependent on the industry in question.

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    Subcontractor costs

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    Technical analysis

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    Management salaries

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    Testing

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    Prototyping

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    Developing new processes

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    Software licenses

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    Hardware costs

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    Premises expenses

How much can a company recover?

Profitable and loss making companies are able to recover between 15% and 16.2% of the amount they have spent on qualifying R&D expenditure.

Profitable
Company (£)
Loss making
Company (£)
Loss making
R&D intensive
Company (£)
Profit prior to R&D claim1,000,000Profit prior to R&D claimProfit prior to R&D claim
RDEC (20%) on 100,000 qualifying expenditure                   20,000RDEC (20%) on 100,000 qualifying expenditure                   20,000Qualifying R&D expenditure                100,000
Taxable profit/ (loss)           1,020,000Taxable (notional) profit/ (loss)                   20,000Enhanced deduction                   86,000
Corporation tax due (25%)                255,000Corporation tax (19%)(3,800)Total corporation tax deduction                186,000
Less: RDEC(20,000)
Corporation tax  payable                235,000Corporation tax deduction sacrificed(186,000)
Cash repayment                   16,200
Corporation tax payable when ignoring the R&D claim                250,000Cash repayment (14.5%)                   26,970
Corporation tax saving                   15,000

Wondering if you qualify for tax credits?

Get in touch, to get your free no-obligation tax credit calculation.