My son's current and previous employer want fuel receipts when claiming his 45p business mileage expenses. I've been retired six years now, but my employer never requested receipts, I just claimed miles x 45p and it was paid.
Does anyone know if HMRC rules have changed? My employer was a large insurance company. They understood tax and would have taken advantage of any saving had it been available.
Some companies I've worked for in the past have required recepits, others none (just requiring the destination and milage based on wherever you started at [home/office/eslewhere, whichever is the shortest*]).
* some sneaky people will base the journey on the longer travel distance (say from the office) even though they went from home and back again. Also some people will claim whilst getting a lift in a colleague's car, though I don't really know how giving fuel receipt can prove anything either way.
Some stingey firms will pay less the the max. allowable MHRC rate and expect employees just to claim the tax back on the difference in per mile rates, which for most is just 20% - pratically nothing. Often that makes running you own car for at work travelling uneconomic (costing you money rather than at least cost neutral).
For example, a former employer only 'gave' me 35p a mile and for only the first 4,000 miles (not 10,000) and then 25p a mile thereafter. That would mean, including claiming the tax back, I only got 37p/mile. I ended up using their pool car more often for longer journeys, which suited me nicely, especially as the car was nearly identical to my own.
I also suspect that if you have a company car or perhaps a car allowance, the firm will more likely insist or fuel receipts.
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