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Income Tax (Trading and Other Income) Act 2005

Section 92: Expenses connected with foreign trades

372.This is the first of three sections that set out the special rules for expenses of a foreign trade. The sections are based on sections 80 and 81 of ICTA.

373.The expenses to be allowed are those of a business trip: the condition in sections 80(3) and 81(4) of ICTA is that the trader’s absence from the United Kingdom should be wholly and exclusively for the purpose of a foreign trade (or for the purpose of a foreign trade and another trade).

374.The section sets out a single condition related to the purpose of the trader’s absence from the United Kingdom. That condition applies for all the expenses set out in subsection (3).

375.In the case of family expenses, section 80(5) of ICTA requires the absence to be for the purpose of one or more foreign trades. The section relaxes this requirement. It allows the absence to be either for the purposes of the foreign trade or for the purposes of that trade and one or more other trades. The “other trades” may include one that is not carried on wholly outside the United Kingdom. So the treatment of family expenses is brought into line with the treatment of other expenses. See Change 25 in Annex 1.

376.In the case of travelling expenses, section 81(3) of ICTA seems to impose a further condition requiring the performance of “functions” at the place of departure. This section does not include that further condition. See Change 25 in Annex 1.

377.Subsection (1)(d) makes it clear that the section applies if it is only the “wholly and exclusively” rule that would otherwise disallow the expenses. The normal trading rule (based on the courts’ explanation of the rule in section 34 of this Act) is that the cost of home to work travel is not allowable for tax purposes. Other trading rules (such as the prohibition for capital expenditure in section 33) continue to apply.

378.Subsection (2) includes the rule that the special relief is not available if the income from the trade is assessable by reference to amounts received in the United Kingdom (the “remittance basis”). Section 80 of ICTA refers to section 65(4) of ICTA. This section refers directly to the remittance basis, which is explained in section 878(2) of this Act.

379.The section applies the special rules to the calculation of the profits of Irish trades (always assessed on the arising basis) even if the taxpayer’s other foreign income is assessed on the remittance basis. See Change 26 in Annex 1.

380.Subsection (3) sets out the expenses that qualify for relief under this section.

381.Subsection (4) defines the term “foreign trade”. It replaces the reference in section 80 of ICTA to a trade carried on wholly abroad and the reference in section 81 of ICTA to a trade “in the case of which section 80 applies”.

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Explanatory Notes

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