Letter to HMRC regarding pool car status
A pool car can be very tax efficient but in order to get one past HMRC you’ll need to meet some strict conditions. To avoid uncertainty, use this letter to obtain confirmation from HMRC that the terms on which the car is used make it a pool car.
No private use
Get a pool car past HMRC and you can secure some excellent tax savings - no taxable benefit on the driver, no fuel benefit charge and no employers’ NI. But to obtain this status, you’ll need to gather evidence together about the use of the pool car.
Strict conditions
The conditions that have to be met are: (1) it must be available to and actually used by more than one employee; (2) it must not be used by one employee to the exclusion of others; (3) it should not normally be kept overnight at an employee’s home; and (4) it must not be used for private journeys except as a small part of a business journey. Given that the rules provide a total exemption from any tax charge, it’s not surprising that HMRC applies them very strictly.
Confirmation
Use our Letter to HMRC Regarding Pool Car Status to work through what HMRC is after. Send it in with copies of the employees’ driving licences and the Pool Car Journey Record. The decision about whether the vehicle will be accepted as a pool car will normally be taken by HMRC (at inspector level), although an appeal may be made on the issue to the First-tier Tribunal.
Related Topics
-
HMRC writes to non-domiciled taxpayers following rule changes
HMRC has begun issuing “one-to-many” letters to individuals affected by recent changes to the tax rules for non-UK domiciled taxpayers. The letters prompt recipients to review their tax position under the new regime. What does this mean if you receive one?
-
Can officers ignore minor input tax errors?
If your business has claimed input tax on an invoice where the supplier has charged VAT incorrectly, HMRC can disallow your claim by issuing an assessment. Can the officer waive that power to achieve a common sense outcome?
-
Practical guide: Tax-efficient will planning with residential property
An individual has a significant property portfolio which provides them with their sole source of income. They want to gift shares in some property to their daughter but retain the income. Can they do this without triggering the reservation of benefit rules?




This website uses both its own and third-party cookies to analyze our services and navigation on our website in order to improve its contents (analytical purposes: measure visits and sources of web traffic). The legal basis is the consent of the user, except in the case of basic cookies, which are essential to navigate this website.