If
you do then these are tax deductible for your business. Generally your
employees are not taxed on the value of the training, providing it
relates to their current role or to some activity they may have to
perform as part of their job.
The same does not apply in this case. Unfortunately an employee cannot claim a tax relief for training costs unless the training was actually carried out in the performance of their job, as opposed to preparing them to do the job. So it is highly unlikely that an employee who pays training costs personally will obtain any tax relief for the costs.
An alternative would be to agree with the employee, in advance of them undertaking the training, for the employer to pay for the training and the employee to reduce their salary to compensate.
As you can see from the comparison below both the employer and employee are better off after the salary sacrifice due to the tax and National Insurance (NI) savings.
It is vital that salary sacrifice arrangements are implemented correctly. Please contact us if you would like to discuss this further.
|
Pre-salary sacrifice £
|
Post salary sacrifice £
|
|
| Salary |
20,000
|
18,500
|
| Training costs paid |
1,500
|
1,500
|
| Employer's NI at 12.8% |
1,891
|
1,699
|
| Employee's NI at 11% |
1,625
|
1,460
|
| Employee’s tax saved |
-
|
330
|
| Total employer cost |
21,891
|
21,699
|