Go Back
Business and Tax Newsletter January 2022
January
2022
BUSINESS
NEWS NORTHERN IRELAND
We wish you a happy new
year and let’s hope 2022 is more stable from a business perspective and that by
the end of the year we can return to some kind of “normality”.
Remember to declare
COVID-19 grants on your tax return
HM Revenue and Customs
(HMRC) is reminding Self-Assessment tax payers to declare any COVID-19 grant
payments on their 2020 to 2021 tax return.
These grants are taxable,
and you should declare them on your 2020 to 2021 tax return before the deadline
on 31 January 2022.
The Self-Employed Income
Support Scheme (SEISS) application and payment windows during the 2020 to 2021
tax year were:
- SEISS 1: 13 May 2020 to 13 July
2020
- SEISS 2: 17 August 2020 to 19
October 2020
- SEISS 3: 29 November 2020 to 29
January 2021
SEISS is not the only
COVID-19 support scheme that tax payers should declare on their tax return. If
you received other support payments during COVID-19, you may need to report
this on your tax return if you are:
- self-employed
- in a partnership
- a business
You need to report grants
and payments from the following COVID-19 support schemes:
- the
Self-Employment Income Support Scheme (SEISS)
- test
and trace or self-isolation payments in England, Scotland and Wales
- the
Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme (CJRS)
- Eat
Out to Help Out
- Coronavirus
Statutory Sick Pay Rebate
- Coronavirus
Business Support Grants
For information on
reporting coronavirus (COVID-19) grants and support payments see: Reporting coronavirus
(COVID-19) grants and support payments - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
Statutory Sick Pay Rebate
scheme (SSPRS)
The government is reintroducing
the Statutory Sick Pay Rebate Scheme (SSPRS). This will be a temporary scheme
to support employers facing heightened levels of sickness absence due to
COVID-19. The SSPRS will refund small and medium-sized employers’ COVID-related
SSP costs for up to two weeks per employee. To qualify for the scheme employers
must have less than 250 employees.
Employers will be eligible
for the scheme if they are UK-based, employed fewer than 250 employees as of 30
November 2021, they had a PAYE payroll system as off 30 November 2021 and they
have already paid their employees’ COVID-related SSP.
Employers will be able to
claim the costs for up to two weeks of SSP per employee that has to take time
off because of COVID-19. This two-week limit will be reset so an employer will
be able to claim up to two weeks per employee regardless of whether they have
claimed under the previous scheme for that employee.
The scheme is being
reintroduced so that employers can claim for COVID-related sickness absences
occurring from 21 December 2021 onwards. Employers will be able to make a claim
through HMRC from mid-January onwards, using this website:
This is a temporary scheme
to support employers facing heightened levels of sickness absence due to
COVID-19. The government will keep the duration of the scheme under review.
Employers must keep
records of Statutory Sick Pay that they have paid and want to claim back from
HMRC. Employers must keep the following records for 3 years after the date they
receive the payment for their claim:
- the
dates the employee was off sick
- which
of those dates were qualifying days
- the
reason they said they were off work due to COVID-19
- the
employee’s National Insurance number
See: COVID-19 economic support
package - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
Coronavirus: Omicron
Hospitality Payment
Over 3,200 businesses will
be eligible for a one-off grant payment under the scheme, subject to
regulations. Payment levels will align with the Net Annual Value (NAV) for the
relevant business property, as follows:
- £10,000 for businesses that are the
primary occupant operating from a property with a Net Annual Value (NAV)
up to £15,000; or businesses that are occupied as part of a property
- £15,000 for businesses that are the
primary occupant operating from a property with a Net Annual Value (NAV)
between £15,001 to £51,000
- £20,000 for businesses that are the
primary occupant operating from a property with a Net Annual Value (NAV)
over £51,000
Eligible businesses will
include:
- Restaurants licensed under Article
5(1)(e) of the Licensing (Northern Ireland) Order 1996
- Unlicensed restaurants
- Cafés
- Coffee shops
- Bistros
- Snack bars
- Public houses licensed under
Article 5(1)(a) of the Licensing (Northern Ireland) Order 1996
- Social clubs and private members
clubs (excluding sporting clubhouses)
- Nightclubs
Land & Property
Services (LPS) will contact eligible businesses who received support from the
Localised Restrictions Support Scheme (LRSS) directly during the week commencing
10 January 2022 for confirmation of relevant business information in order to
enable payments for the Omicron Hospitality Payment to issue.
Hospitality businesses
which did not receive support from the Localised Restrictions Support Scheme
who would have been eligible for LRSS based on their current circumstances,
will also have the opportunity to apply for support through this payment using
an application portal.