Upcoming Changes to Overseas R&D You Need To Know
Under the current rules for both Research & Development schemes, companies are able to claim relief on R&D activity that is conducted overseas. Claimants under the RDEC scheme are restricted on certain subcontracted costs, but the location of where the work is performed on both schemes is irrelevant.
However, this will change from April 2023. Where companies subcontract R&D activity to a third party, they will in future only be able to claim relief for that expenditure where that third party performs the work within the UK. The rules for subcontracting will not otherwise change under both schemes. Where companies incur expenditure on payments for externally provided workers (EPWs), they will only be able to claim relief on such expenditure where those workers are paid through a UK payroll.
This is a pretty significant departure from the old rules, and one which will require a good number of companies to rethink their R&D strategy. We act for many companies which utilise overseas R&D services and the costs associated with this activity have historically always been allowable. If you do have clients that utilise overseas services, now is the time to tell them about this forthcoming rule change.
These new rules will apply to a company’s first accounting period which begins on or after the 1st of April 2023. For example, if you have a client with a 30th of September year-end, the new rules will only apply for the year that ended on the 30th of September 2024 onwards. To be absolutely clear, only the overseas costs spent after the 1st of October 2023 are restricted.
There is one final important point to note.
Where a company incurs consumable costs from overseas (for example, if a company purchases raw materials which are utilised in the R&D process), such costs will not be affected by the new rules. The company will also still be able to claim R&D tax relief on the costs of software and payments for data & cloud sourced from overseas as these are considered inputs to activity in the UK.
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