One story (and the technical rules) that make full expensing safe
By Angelo Chirulli – angelo@vectigalistax.co.uk
Full expensing in one line: a 100% first-year allowance for new and unused main-rate plant & machinery purchased by a company and used in its trade.
A 50% first-year allowance applies to many special-rate assets. (Cars are excluded.) Made permanent from expenditure incurred on/after 1 April 2023.
The story
Monday, 08:10 — ABCDE Ltd (a very real-sounding but fictional UK company) kicks off a one-month capex refresh.
Ops want a brand-new fiber laser (hire purchase), a shop-floor refit (lighting, power runs, extraction), a “new to us” forklift (refurbished), and a company van the MD may borrow at weekends.
Finance say: “Let’s put full expensing on everything and close year-end strong.”
Tuesday, 14:20 — Paperwork lands.
Two refit packages are on short operating leases (“we can upgrade later”). The laser is on HP with a commissioning window that may slide into next period. The forklift is refurbished but “as good as new.” No one has checked eligibility beyond a quick spreadsheet tick.
Thursday, 18:45 — Ten-minute review, four red flags.
- Refurbished forklift. Full expensing requires new and unused assets; second-hand/refurbished does not qualify. (AIA may.)
- Operating leases on refit kit. Assets acquired for leasing are generally excluded from first-year allowances (including FE). Operating leases also don’t confer ownership for capital allowances (HP/buy can). Background plant within a building can be an exception.
- Hidden special-rate items. Parts of the refit (integral features like fixed electrics/extraction) sit in the special-rate pool; under FE they typically get 50% in year one unless you deploy AIA first.
- Commissioning after year-end. For HP, relief links to the asset being brought into use; miss the period and you miss the year-one deduction. (Expenditure must actually be incurred on/after 1 April 2023; timing rules matter.)
Silence in the room. Then the FD asks: “Give me a rule we can run before we sign.”
The Coffee Test (30 seconds before you approve the purchasing order)
Three questions:
- New and unused? (Not refurbished/second-hand).
- Owned (buy/HP), not an operating lease?
- Delivered and brought into use this accounting period?
Three “Yes” → full expensing likely fits.
Any “No” → use the correct route (AIA, timing change, or standard allowances) instead of forcing FE.
We run the test line-by-line. In five minutes the plan rewrites itself—without changing the shopping list.
The technical fixes we made (and why they’re right)
- Forklift (refurbished) → AIA, not FE. AIA often gives 100% in year one (subject to the £1m cap and normal restrictions).
- Refit (mixed contracts) → core items switched to HP (ownership + “brought into use” → FE eligible if main-rate and new); non-core stayed on lease, accepting no FE (unless falling under the background plant exception).
- Special-rate elements (e.g., integral features) → we used AIA first to reach 100% this year, then applied FE to the remaining main-rate spend. (FE is 100% for main-rate, 50% for many special-rate assets.)
- Laser (HP) timing → locked commissioning before period end; where impossible, adjusted forecasts and QIPs rather than over-claiming. (FE claims must reflect when expenditure is incurred and, for HP, in-use status.)
Why we avoided a future headache: FE has disposal symmetry—sell FE-claimed kit later and you can face an immediate balancing/disposal charge (often equal to proceeds where 100% FYA was claimed). Planning holding period and likely exit matters.
Evidence pack (the “boringly good” file)
- Supplier statement that the asset is “new and unused.”
- Contract type (buy/HP vs operating lease), with HP terms attached.
- Delivery and (if HP) commissioning evidence dated within the period.
- Asset classification (main-rate vs special-rate) and the chosen route (FE / 50% FYA / AIA / SBA).
- If any private/mixed use risk (e.g., a van): a one-page usage policy and apportionment note.
- A line noting the likely disposal path (to pre-empt FE clawback mechanics).
(These mirror HMRC’s public guidance and internal manual emphasis on “new & unused,” timing, and claim route.)
The Board Grid (paste this into every capex pack)
Asset | New/used | Pool (main/special) | Route (FE / 50% FYA / AIA / SBA / none) | Ownership (buy/HP/lease) | Delivery & “in-use” date | Mixed use? | Disposal plan
Complete it before you sign. It prevents most FE errors and defends the file when challenged.
Quick technical FAQs
- Who can claim FE? Only companies (not LLPs/sole traders).
- Cars? No (other vehicles may qualify for FE; zero-emission cars can have a separate 100% FYA under different rules).
- Leasing? Assets bought to lease out are generally excluded from FE (exception: some background plant within a building). Operating leases don’t give capital allowances to the lessee.
- Period & permanence? FE applies to qualifying spend from 1 April 2023, and the regime was made permanent (policy statement).
- Double-claiming? You cannot claim both FE and AIA on the same expenditure. Choose the optimal sequence across the asset list.
Bottom line
Full expensing isn’t a mystery—it’s a checklist discipline. Ask the Coffee Test before you sign; route special-rate items through AIA first; keep timing and ownership clean; plan the exit.
Do that, and you’ll get the cash-flow outcome and a file that stands up on review.
Contact: angelo@vectigalistax.co.uk
This article provides general information and is not advice. Always assess your specific facts and documentation before filing.