Cycle to work schem...
 

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Cycle to work scheme. Could the hive clear something up for me please?

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Am I right in thinking the £1000 limit has been scraped? Reason why I’m asking is after a quick Google I’m under the impression that it has but the guy in accounts at my workplace is adamant it still is a 1k limit. The bike I was looking at, a Planet X Hurricane sram force is on offer atm at £1900 and was looking at getting one. The thing is I can’t understand why he’s being arsey about it. It’s not as if it’s coming out of his own pocket and I’ll be paying it back anyway.


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 7:31 pm
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Your company is perfectly within their rights to keep the £1k limit if they wish to.


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 7:34 pm
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It's down to whatever your company has as their limit, the scheme has no limit now, but companies have an agreement with the scheme that may have a limit, a lot of companies haven't changed over to get a new limit, so yours could be one of those, stuck with a £1000 limit.


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 7:34 pm
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It has been scrapped, but it’s up to the organisation you work for as to how much you’re allowed to borrow. Ours is now £3k


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 7:34 pm
 5lab
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Depends on your company. Afaik it's still easier to do £1000 so that's what a lot do


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 7:34 pm
 Kuco
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I think it depends on your company. Mine has gone up to £6000


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 7:35 pm
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£10k at my place...

I was surprised, but I have two roadie directors that commute to work.

The company can set the limit, as I think they stump up the cash in the first instance...


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 7:41 pm
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£3,500 to cope with leccy bikes here !


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 7:43 pm
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Always surprises me how many bikes you see priced at just over 1 or 2 or 3k. You'd think bike companies would price them at 1p below any possible c2w scheme limit.


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 7:45 pm
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Ask your employer if they would be willing to increase the limit


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 8:05 pm
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The guy said the reason why was because we don’t have a consumer credit licence so can’t go over the 1k mark. However am I right in thinking that if you go through one of the schemes they have the credit license so the limit isn’t an issue? Up to now he hasn’t used any of the various schemes for any workers who have got a bike through work because, in his words, they take a cut for not doing anything. Yes he’s a tight arse, that’s why he’s in accounts 😂


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 8:07 pm
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My employer has only recently increased the limit from £1k to £3k, however, they also now do plans over 12,18 & 24 months. Previously, it was £1k limit over 12 months only.


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 8:07 pm
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My employer is incredible for the stuff they give us as benefits, and have lots of people earning enough to REALLY take advantage of it (despite not needing to, if you catch my drift)

Our limit’s a grand. 😭


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 8:08 pm
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If they won't increase the limit, you can just pay the difference over £1000.


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 8:43 pm
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If they won’t increase the limit, you can just pay the difference over £1000.

Not advisable though. And a lot of shops won’t allow it.


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 8:46 pm
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If they won’t increase the limit, you can just pay the difference over £1000.

I was actually told by a shop that it was illegal to pay extra when I wanted a dearer bike.


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 8:55 pm
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Thing is, you can still easily buy an adequate bike to cycle to work on for £1k (or less).

Do you really want him to unpick your request any further and discover you have no intention of riding the £3k gravel sled (That technically belongs to the company until you pay the final settlement fee) to work?


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 8:56 pm
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I had to hassle my previous place for weeks until they finally agreed to go to £3000 limit (up from £1000). Then they refused point blank to allow any other retailer anyway (had to be through Halfords and because the scheme was being delivered through one of those dreadful Workplace Perks companies, they weren't interested in trying to be helpful. I tried to get them to go to Green Commute Initiative but nope, it had to be thise scheme, no other employee benefits allowed.

My current place is even worse, £2000 limit and again it's through a third party and they won't budge on the specifics.

The limit is up to the company now but they're within their rights to stick to the original £1000.


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 9:01 pm
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Thing is, you can still easily buy an adequate bike to cycle to work on for £1k (or less).

But that grand hasn’t increased with inflation though, since the schemes inception. Plus a lot of the schemes are just cycle schemes, what you do with the bike isn’t specified


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 9:02 pm
 5lab
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hing is, you can still easily buy an adequate bike to cycle to work on for £1k (or less).

for e-bikes I'd disagree somewhat. 2k, yes, but most stuff under a grand is trash


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 9:02 pm
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Scrapped, I sold a 10k colnago on the ctws but he was the only employee in his company so he and his accountant set the limit.
Your company can set whatever limit they like


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 9:02 pm
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Mine is also £1k through Halfords.

Same reason, they already have some sort of consumer credit approval for their business and a separate one would be needed for c2w and it would conflict apparently 🙁


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 9:04 pm
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Slight hijack, does it have to be ridden to work ever?

Just got an offer for a new job and one of the perks is cycle 2 work...but I'm home based with a company ev for all site work.


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 9:11 pm
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what you do with the bike isn’t specified

Strongly implied by the term "cycle to work"...

The scheme was originally intended to help people on lower wages access a better quality bike to get to work on without having to stump up typically unaffordable sums in one hit or take on credit with an interest rate...

It's become a tax dodge/0% loan scheme for the middle-classes to put another shiny toy in the garage...


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 9:14 pm
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Scrapped, I sold a 10k colnago on the ctws but he was the only employee in his company so he and his accountant set the limit.
Your company can set whatever limit they like

Mmmm, what bike for the 35 metre commute to the garden office ? 😉


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 9:17 pm
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Slight hijack, does it have to be ridden to work ever?

There's no check on it if that's what you mean... 😉

The scheme was originally intended to help people on lower wages access a better quality bike to get to work on without having to stump up typically unaffordable sums in one hit or take on credit with an interest rate…

Although as a lower rate taxpayer, you can't save as much as a higher rate taxpayer could even though the higher rate payer is more likely to be able to afford the bike outright in the first place...


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 9:20 pm
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Slight hijack, does it have to be ridden to work ever?

It says bike to be used more for work than personal use but how they check this I do not know


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 9:21 pm
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I supposed it could be argued that every bike ride would be from home to my office...


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 9:30 pm
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Strongly implied by the term “cycle to work”…

that’s the name of one scheme/provider. There are many.

The scheme was originally intended to help people on lower wages access a better quality bike to get to work on without having to stump up typically unaffordable sums in one hit or take on credit with an interest rate…

but not the lowest wages, as you still have to earn minimum wage AFTER your deductions have been made.


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 9:43 pm
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Your company is perfectly within their rights to keep the £1k limit if they wish to.

Mmm. In the same way as the company is within their rights to do various other pointless things that needlessly disadvantage their staff and increase the likelihood of employees pissing off and finding somehere less shit to work.

I had an argument with someone at our company about why it was fine for me to hire a £115,000 Mercedes AMG for five years out of my pre tax salary but not ok for me to hire a £4 grand bike on C2W


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 9:51 pm
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I had an argument with someone at our company about why it was fine for me to hire a £115,000 Mercedes AMG for five years out of my pre tax salary but not ok for me to hire a £4 grand bike on C2W

The Merc wouldn't cost your company anything upfront and all the liability will rest with you. That's not the case for the cycle to work schemes I've seen. They either require the company to pay up front or borrow the money themselves, before gradually reclaiming the money from the employee.


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 10:16 pm
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Don't forget the company get a benefit too.

The B2W cost out of you wage is a 'salary sacrifice'.  The company save paying employer National Insurance on that 'sacrificed' amount.

(Depending on pension scheme and how administered they may also make some savings there too).

My experience was my old Co, that on the whole were pretty good at looking after staff, just had zero interest in cycling so only allowed £1k and only from Halfrauds.  Which = shiiite squared.

Strangely, after a reverse takeover about 4 years ago the company that inherited the Co in the reverse takeover were total kerhuubts as far as their contemptuous treatment of staff. Except actually did B2W properly with a £2.5k limit and could use any bike shop or nearly all online too.

(I got a new road bike at £2.5k just before Covid happened,  stuck it out there through Covid, then when the bike was securely mine I ****ed off somewhere else  where I am appreciated... with many clients following me with work to do 🙂)


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 10:42 pm
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Ours is through Caboodle. £1000 limit, you have to have an order quote specifing exactly which bike, model, colour, frame number, etc, they then take a month or so authorise the voucher. The shop is expected to hold the bike until the voucher turns up.

Complete shambles.


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 10:51 pm
 jca
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£10k!!! - can I buy a car on this scheme, and use it once a week to drive to work while I cycle the rest for of the week?


 
Posted : 23/11/2022 10:56 pm
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Those with Halfords vouchers… it’s worth doing a bit of research and shopping about. Other places take Halfords C2W vouchers, e.g. Sonder. Not sure how it works but I just have them the voucher code and it sailed through.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 5:32 am
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The way the schemes work had changed. In 2019 the gov changed the rules such that it's allowable for companies to sub out the hire element to a third party. In doing so the requirements for FCA licensing for agreements over 1k passes to the schemes. So... If your company goes via a scheme, there's a good chance it's now able to go over 1k. It may still be that Not all schemes are set up to do this, but all the bug guys are. If your company does it itself then it's still 1k without a credit licence.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 7:38 am
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Biketart also take Halfords vouchers, although I did have to top up the sale price to the RRP.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 7:51 am
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my work uses the Halfords scheme. You can spend the voucher at Halfords, Tredz or a large number of independents.

Some independents charge a percentage to take the voucher (as it costs them).

But either way, this opens up lots of avenues.

If you speak nicely to the independents, many of them are happy for you to top up your voucher with cash, even tho technically this shouldn't be allowed.

It doesnt have to be spent on a bike. It can be parts. If your current bike is un-rideable as it only has Fox 36's on it, by all means, get the latest 38's to make it safe to be seen on 🙂

I know people who have bought downhill bikes on the scheme. No one checks what you buy. No one checks whether you ride it to work.

In fact, there is nothing really stopping you from buying a bike and selling it tomorrow. Obviously the small print and 'rules' say you cant do much of the above, but as mentioned, no one checks.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 7:52 am
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It doesnt have to be spent on a bike. It can be parts. If your current bike is un-rideable as it only has Fox 36’s on it, by all means, get the latest 38’s to make it safe to be seen on

My scheme excludes frames and forks, but anything else is fair game.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 7:59 am
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Those with Halfords vouchers… it’s worth doing a bit of research and shopping about. Other places take Halfords C2W vouchers, e.g. Sonder. Not sure how it works but I just have them the voucher code and it sailed through.

+1.
Our scheme is subbed out to 'Caboodle technology' who also manage childcare vouchers and some other benefits.
The limit is currently 2.5k, and although the voucher has Halfords printed on it you can use it elsewhere.
I'm half way through paying for a £1700 bike from Dolan with my current voucher.

FWIW - Dolan were great through this process, very easy to deal with.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 8:39 am
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For info CRC and Wiggle are stopping accepting vouchers from 27th November until 2023 in case anyone was thinking of ordering from them. I got a voucher last week and they made it really difficult to order so I gave up in the end yesterday and used Tredz instead. With Tredz you just put your voucher details in at checkout so it made it really simple. Hopefully CRC/Wiggle are updating from the manual order process to a more automated system like Tredz have.

https://cycletowork.wiggle.co.uk/


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 8:43 am
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question is @robbo1234biking ... what did you get 🙂


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 8:58 am
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Nothing very exciting! Some waterproof winter boots, waterproof, some other clothing etc. Actual stuff that is used for a commute!


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 9:01 am
 cb
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Given the choice (ahem) of which scheme one's company should join, what would it be? I seem to remember from a previous discussion on the schemes themselves rather than the concept, that one stood out as offering the particpant the best 'value'.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 9:30 am
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My company used a scheme which had a £1k limit for quite a while. i used it a couple of times for bikes sub £1k and other small stuff. When I looked at buying bought a pricier bike i realized it was limited to £1k and, as it was YT i was buying from, I needed to use a specific scheme with a higher limit (used GCI). I just spoke to our accountant who simply bought the voucher from them to swap for the bike - there was a pretty basic form to complete too. It seems to me there isn't any tax/legal reason to prevent you from spending more than £1k. Might just be your finance department are being tight/difficult. Could be they are reluctant to essentially lend you the full price of the bike as it does come up as an outstanding debt on their balance sheets wuntill paid off.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 9:31 am
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Slight hijack, does it have to be ridden to work ever?

Yes. Its supposed to be used for that purpose. Cant remember what it is but supposed to be x% of trips to work (although that can be partial eg cycling to the train station for the rest of the way).

We got a warning last time it opened which came across as "it doesnt apply for home workers but we arent going to check and chances are the government wont bother so try it if you want".


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 9:52 am
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one stood out as offering the particpant the best ‘value

I think that was GCI, but not got personal experience of them myself


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 9:53 am
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In re: "nobody checks what you use your bike for".

I am not a cycling-related tax lawyer, but...

https://help.cyclescheme.co.uk/article/44-do-i-have-ride-to-work-everyday

...this suggests that technically one should *mostly* use the bike (or kit) purchased through a cycle scheme for work-related journeys.

During the COVID lockdown era the government actually announced an easement to this requirement in recognition of the fact that employees were being required to stay at home (without the easement employees would technically have to pay tax on a benefit in kind):

https://questions-statements.parliament.uk/written-statements/detail/2020-12-17/hcws676

So that suggests to me that, legally speaking, one should be using equipment purchased through a cycle scheme for work, even if you can practically ignore that requirement because nobody ever checks.

I'd quite like to be proven wrong on this point as I work from home and my employer and I previously considered that the cycle scheme would effectively be tax fraud for us 🙁

Don't forget, they got Al Capone in the end for a tax dodge...


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 9:57 am
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Could be they are reluctant to essentially lend you the full price of the bike as it does come up as an outstanding debt on their balance sheets wuntill paid off.

In the past, at least, the reason was to go above 1k needed a specific consumer credit licence which presumably has a whole bunch of paperwork/costs associated with it. Hence most companies kept to that limit although those companies which already had the licence for their day to day business could offer more.
Now though the law got changed so instead of going via the company its direct from the cycle scheme provider for whom it makes sense to get the licence.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 10:00 am
 SSS
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If you buy the bike for £X, and pay over 12 months. At the end of the 12 month period of 'hire', you have to pay the market value of the bike to the hire company?
Its right that the payment isnt to buy it, but to hire it?

How much do they charge you to buy it at end of the 'hire' period? They say fair market value..... anyone got examples?

(company im working with is £3k, 12 months only, no additional funds allowable to upgrade, and its effectively a 12 month hire, pay at end/extend hire/give it back)


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 10:07 am
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from the Halfords C2W site in regards to using the items to cycle to work:

The government guidelines state that you should use your bike and accessories for commuting for at least 50% of its usage however you do not have to log your bikes mileage and we thoroughly encourage you to use your bike in your spare time!

But as stated, no one ever checks. How could they? Whilst officially, you should use it for work, there is nothing stopping you from not.

If you work from home I can understand this might be harder to justify, but again, its unlikely that anyone from HMRC or whoever checks.

We have had people buy groupsets, suspension forks, bikes, spares, all sorts on our scheme (again, its the halfords one, so my experience and comments are based on this, but from what i gather, they are all pretty similar).

Once the 'voucher' is issued, i am not even sure our accounts or HR department have access to what it was spent on.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 10:09 am
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@SSS - the Halfords scheme works in a way that at the end of the 12 months you then 'hire' the bike for an additional 4 or 5 years. But this hire costs zero. Its basically a period of time that the bike then loses all value, so HMRC write it off.

from the C2W website:

Once your hire period has come to an end, we’ll get in touch to discuss your options. This will include the opportunity to extend the hire of the cycle at no additional cost until HMRC deem the value to be negligible. This is typically 4 or 5 years, and once this agreement has finished you will become the rightful owner!


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 10:12 am
 SSS
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@v7fmp cheers for that. my company scheme wasnt that explicit when i read the Ts and Cs....


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 10:14 am
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If you work from home I can understand this might be harder to justify, but again, its unlikely that anyone from HMRC or whoever checks.

Aye, fair enough. I don't imagine for a moment that it'd be worth anyone's time trying to validate usage. Not least because there's no requirement for the individual to keep any kind of records.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 10:20 am
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I'm currently on my fourth bike to work bike, and the first one I've actually used to commute on! Though TBF, I was actually a cycle commuter when I got the previous PlanetX Superlight, Genesis High Latitude singlespeed and Whyte 629. Behold the magnificent Trek District 4 Equipped!


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 11:29 am
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Thing is, you can still easily buy an adequate bike to cycle to work on for £1k (or less).

Do you really want him to unpick your request any further and discover you have no intention of riding the £3k gravel sled (That technically belongs to the company until you pay the final settlement fee) to work?

It's a bit of a minomer as companies can quite happily offer you a "Drive to Work" scheme under salary sacrifice, where you get a car from your pre-tax pay, and then pay BIK as if it were a company car. Which is 2% for electric cars.

People should stop the handwringing about not rocking the boat in case it gets closed, and start demanding parity with the car schemes.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 12:09 pm
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my company scheme wasnt that explicit when i read the Ts and Cs….

Because they're not allowed to be specific. It's one if the crazy nuances of the scheme. That's why the Halfords text quoted uses words like "typically" and "may". If they specify it too strictly then it becomes hire purchase. The whole scheme is such a shambolic mess. Just weird that a portion of our taxes goes towards two different government departments trying to outgame each other ( HMRC and whoever does C2W)

It’s a bit of a minomer as companies can quite happily offer you a “Drive to Work” scheme under salary sacrifice, where you get a car from your pre-tax pay, and then pay BIK as if it were a company car. Which is 2% for electric cars.

People should stop the handwringing about not rocking the boat in case it gets closed, and start demanding parity with the car schemes.

Exactly. Hence my frustration about the Merc AMG that I can effectively have tax free.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 12:18 pm
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Exactly. Hence my frustration about the Merc AMG that I can effectively have tax free.

But your company doesn't have to fund the full purchase price of that up front. They do with a bike.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 12:24 pm
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Indeed they do. But it's an utterly trivial amount of money for them.

Bear in mind that this is a company that happily chucks me an additional 13% on top of any additional pension contributions that I happen to make because " since you're not taking it as salary, we don't have to pay employer's NI so why don't you have it instead.."

The amount they save on employers NI far outweighs any risk they have on the bike cash they have to stump up up front.

The problem is that someone in Central finance has deemed that £4k is an obscene amount of money for a bike ( which of course it is)
But für some reason they don't think that £53,000 over 5 years is obscene for a car ( which it is)


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 12:30 pm
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People should stop the handwringing about not rocking the boat in case it gets closed, and start demanding parity with the car schemes.

This.
As far as i'm concerned i pay more than enough tax to justify taking advantage of a tax free bike purchase - even if it doesn't see the office very often (or ever)


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 12:49 pm
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Those with Halfords vouchers… it’s worth doing a bit of research and shopping about. Other places take Halfords C2W vouchers, e.g. Sonder. Not sure how it works

We used to take Halfords vouchers but Halfords made it such a pain to redeem them and took 3 x as much percentage than CTaW etc that we started refusing them as we made so little on the bikes


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 1:53 pm
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Does anyone else work for a company that refuses to offer a C2W scheme?

Mine doesn't despite listing it as a benefit on their recruitment page for a couple of years. When a few employees asked to use the scheme it took the HR department three months to come back with the answer that no scheme was on offer and three months after that to remove the "benefit" from recruitment page.

The frustrating thing is that we are constantly being told about employment "benefits" which are almost completely worthless - e.g. £50 per year towards dental bills - that does not cover one check up at my practice.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 2:08 pm
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If any of you own or run a Ltd company, you can buy a company bike or bikes for employee use that is/are 100% tax deductable and potentially you can get the vat back if you are registered.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 2:25 pm
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As far as i’m concerned i pay more than enough tax to justify taking advantage of a tax free bike purchase – even if it doesn’t see the office very often (or ever)

My issue is that its a perk for the better off rather than those who need it. As a higher rate tax payer why should I get a subsidised toy and minimum wage workers get nothing?


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 3:07 pm
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minimum wage workers get nothing?

Are you sure this is correct?
Lots of lower income people cannot afford cars and bike to work instead. I bet more 500-1000£ bikes were bought on C2W than 5k dream machines.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 3:28 pm
 bfw
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Back in 2021 my ex-company HR dept made a mistake and said no limit. I said really? Really really?

So I ordered a Colnago C64! Then the company finance team sh*t a brick, I had a chat and suggested I pay the entire sum up front so its not on their books, and we did just that. £9.5k bike for just over £4k 🙂

Go talk to them and be super-nice 🙂


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 3:33 pm
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Are you sure this is correct?

Yes thats correct, you're not allowed to offer the scheme to anyone who would subsequently drop below min wage after the deduction due to the way that actual minimum wage is calculated. I mean you literally could, but if HMRC inspected the company they would deem those people as having been paid < min wage.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 3:34 pm
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No way thats insane, they could go an buy a bike themselves and it would cost more. This is a little nanny statish.
My expereince of accounting and HMRC though, this does not suprise me one bit.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 3:37 pm
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Are you sure this is correct?

Depressing isn't it - high rate tax payer gets to save a truck load off their 'weekend stead' vanity bike that they 'want'. Minimum wage worker who actually 'needs' a cheaper way to get to work can't access it.

It's such a stupid system. There must be better uses of government funds (yes, I appreciate they are not giving money to the scheme, just choosing not to collect monies otherwise due, but it comes to the same thing) so encourage actual cycling to work by those that need the help most.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 3:43 pm
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This is a little nanny statish.

No, it's just the usual tax avoidance perks for the better off dressed up as altruism. It's a total sham of a system.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 3:51 pm
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All the legal stuff is quite complex but there are some legal limits depending on you employer:

-Employer run scheme with no FCA permissions - £1k limit
-Employer run scheme with appropriate FCA permissions - no limit
-Third party to run the scheme (e.g. Cyclescheme, Cycle2Work, Halfords, Bike2Work, Cycle Solutions) - no limit

Even if there isn't a legal limit many employers choose to impose their own limit on the schemes for a variety of reasons. In most cases it's cashflow reasons as the employer usually has to pay for the cost of the bike in full up front. There's minimum wage restrictions too, and recovering funds if the employee leaves can be a faff, so some might want to limit this exposure by having a cap.

The vast majority of employers tend to use a third party scheme just to avoid the hassle of administrating the hire agreements and bike purchases. An employer (definitely not mine...) might be FCA authorised, and hold consumer hire permissions, but may choose to outsource to CycleScheme to avoid the hassle. They might also hypothetically impose an arbitrary £2k limit for no good reason, in spite of the HR Director being an avid cyclist...again, hypothetically speaking.

The third party schemes are easy for employers but aren't ultimately that good for employees or bike shops. The third party schemes charge a commission (typically 5-15%) to bike shops so they have to absorb this cost, or pass this cost onto the customer in some cases e.g. Bird. It's a shame more employers don't run the schemes themselves internally, but I can see why they don't as it's a legal, regulatory, tax, and operational minefield.

Technically speaking, the government guidance says that 50% of the bikes use should be for 'qualifying journeys’, i.e. commuting to work purposes, but no one, not even the government, gives a shit. No one is policing this. Get some forks, or a DH rig, no one cares. It's much easier to do this with the third party schemes as you just get a voucher which can be used at shops that accept them. If you employer runs the scheme internally it's a bit harder to ask Debbie in HR to order some Fox 38s.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 4:03 pm
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My issue is that its a perk for the better off rather than those who need it. As a higher rate tax payer why should I get a subsidised toy and minimum wage workers get nothing?

I agree, its a perk for those of us who are a bit better off - however i think it probably also puts a little money back into the economy - as an example i'd have not bought a new bike this year had i not been able to use C2W.

Ultimately every bike purchased by a working age adult might get used to replace a few car journeys, regardless if that journey is to work or not - and that has to be a good thing.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 4:03 pm
Posts: 408
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It benefits the cycle industry the same way as company car tax rules benefit the motor industry. And it's higher earners who get the most benefit from both.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 4:16 pm
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Depressing isn’t it – high rate tax payer gets to save a truck load off their ‘weekend stead’ vanity bike that they ‘want’. Minimum wage worker who actually ‘needs’ a cheaper way to get to work can’t access it.

It’s such a stupid system

Yes

No, it’s just the usual tax avoidance perks for the better off dressed up as altruism. It’s a total sham of a system.

Yes

however i think it probably also puts a little money back into the economy

Oh spare us the trickledown economics bullshit.

Ultimately every bike purchased by a working age adult might get used to replace a few car journeys, regardless if that journey is to work or not – and that has to be a good thing.

No. This is again just misguided justification. Well off people buying shiny carbon mtbs does not necessarily replace car journeys. In fact it probably increases them.

A system which gives the lucky few 50% ( or thereabouts) off a carbon MTB, but gives less well off 25% off and minimal wagists **** all is wrong.
Justifying it by trickledown or otherwise is wrong.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 4:17 pm
Posts: 8247
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A system which gives the lucky few 50% ( or thereabouts) off a carbon MTB, but gives less well off 25% off and minimal wagists **** all is wrong.

If you are going to argue against it, then get your facts right. Typically the figures are 42% and 32%. That might vary if the provider is offering the employer a discount, or if the employer is using a financed scheme, but you couldn't have the same employer giving their employees 50% for higher rate and 25% for lower rate.

The issue is one of minimum waged workers being told what they are allowed to do with their pay, not whether George the over-paid accounts manager has bought a carbon MTB.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 4:23 pm
Posts: 20675
 

Account managers are often on relatively low basic salaries, topped up with commissions which aren’t taken into account for C2W purposes

I’ve heard…


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 4:37 pm
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A system which gives the lucky few 42% off a carbon MTB, but gives less well off 32% off and minimal wagists **** all is wrong

(With thanks to IJon)


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 4:47 pm
Posts: 11605
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I agree, its a perk for those of us who are a bit better off – however i think it probably also puts a little money back into the economy – as an example i’d have not bought a new bike this year had i not been able to use C2W.

I'd imagine that's minimal if at all, once the commission gets taken the retailer is going to get very little. Good for the manufacturers but that's going to be of limited benefit to our economy.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 8:39 pm
 5lab
Posts: 7921
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but you couldn’t have the same employer giving their employees 50% for higher rate and 25% for lower rate.

The peak discount is 62% if you're earning between 100 and 120k, as that's the rate of tax you pay, making a 4 grand sled just £1500


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 8:46 pm
Posts: 7656
Full Member
 

No. This is again just misguided justification

I did suggest at work once doing a comparison between the number of people using cycle to work vs the number cycling.
I suspect the money could have been better invested on some half decent facilities at the office for the cyclists. Even with just 3-5 regular cyclists it struggled.


 
Posted : 24/11/2022 8:47 pm
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