You have to spend some money what do you blokes spend money on work wise,if you are saving yourself 4-5 grand a year not paying for a vehicle etc or wages you’ll only pay more Tax.
Yea but you'll also earn more net profit right ? Which is always the overall goal
I think handing your asset back and nothing to show for it isnt as good as keeping it and having £6k extra over 3 years for a van that's only say 3-4 years old
....and you are right. But it doesn't mean that someone who leases a van isn't.
Your owned van will continue to depreciate after 3-4 years until its worth very little. After 8 years your van is commercially worthless. If you do a 'high' annual mileage then repairs are the order of the day, tyres, exhausts, brakes, etc. The guy who leases a van for 4 years hands it back and get a brand new one will probably pay a similar monthly rate that he paid the previous contract. He's driving a new van and you've got an old one. The majority of his lease is warranty covered, yours isn't.
Leasing a vehicle is a tax aid even for a non VAT registered sole trader. Leasing is basically a cost that covers a vehicle's depreciation plus interest. Leasing allows you to deduct those payments as a business expense annually. This means that you can indirectly depreciate that vehicle off each year of the lease.
If you buy a van outright you only have 1 choice; to write it off in a single tax year as Annual Investment Allowance. You can't carry any portion across to the following year. Write Down Allowance was removed from income tax a good number of years ago now.
Its a similar issue buying a van on HP. You have to write the value of the van off in year 1 and you can claim the interest portion of the finance each tax year.
We aren't in an industry where van image is that important. We can drive older vans as long as they are respectable. But some industries have to be very image focused and vehicle image is important. The alarm guys fit this profile. Ringtons Tea is another.
Eddie Stobart's vehicles are also part of his image of quality deliveries.
Its generally accepted that builder's vans are battered.