We'd like to remind Forumites to please avoid political debate on the Forum... Read More »
📨 Have you signed up to the Forum's new Email Digest yet? Get a selection of trending threads sent straight to your inbox daily, weekly or monthly!
Mileage Allowance Relief- Help
Options

Steppy1234
Posts: 51 Forumite
in Cutting tax
Hi,
I am looking for some advice for my daughter and what she can claim for Mileage Allowance Relief.
She works as a Children’s Support Worker and this involves using her car for business mileage. Work pay her 30p per mile travelled and informed her should be able to claim the extra 15p per mile from the tax man.
All her mileage has been recorded over the year and a form P87 was submitted. The form worked out that the “Total net allowable expenses you are claiming for the year” was £829.50 and my daughter took it that this was the figure she would be receiving from the tax man. (5530 business miles @ 45p= £2488.50. 30p per mile already paid £1659, difference being £829.50)
Nothing was heard after the form went in and she called them today to ask what was happening, and even though I don’t know exactly what was said, the main thing was she isn’t getting the total money back, just a percentage of it? And how much is linked to her tax code?
I have tried to look on the internet and I understand that Tax Relief is claimed on some out of pocket expenses, but surely this shouldn’t include mileage where the employer chooses not to pay the employee the full allowance?
Can anybody explain or help me understand this?
Thank you
I am looking for some advice for my daughter and what she can claim for Mileage Allowance Relief.
She works as a Children’s Support Worker and this involves using her car for business mileage. Work pay her 30p per mile travelled and informed her should be able to claim the extra 15p per mile from the tax man.
All her mileage has been recorded over the year and a form P87 was submitted. The form worked out that the “Total net allowable expenses you are claiming for the year” was £829.50 and my daughter took it that this was the figure she would be receiving from the tax man. (5530 business miles @ 45p= £2488.50. 30p per mile already paid £1659, difference being £829.50)
Nothing was heard after the form went in and she called them today to ask what was happening, and even though I don’t know exactly what was said, the main thing was she isn’t getting the total money back, just a percentage of it? And how much is linked to her tax code?
I have tried to look on the internet and I understand that Tax Relief is claimed on some out of pocket expenses, but surely this shouldn’t include mileage where the employer chooses not to pay the employee the full allowance?
Can anybody explain or help me understand this?
Thank you
0
Comments
-
From what I understand she doesn't get the additional 15p per mile, she gets the tax back on that amount, so 20%. So yes basically if the employer chooses not to pay the 45p per mile, she cannot claim the 15p per mile difference from HMRC, she can only claim the tax relief on it.
There's definitely a better way of explaining it than how I have just done, which I'm sure somebody more knowledgeable will be able to do soon.0 -
From what I understand she doesn't get the additional 15p per mile, she gets the tax back on that amount, so 20%. So yes basically if the employer chooses not to pay the 45p per mile, she cannot claim the 15p per mile difference from HMRC, she can only claim the tax relief on it.
There's definitely a better way of explaining it than how I have just done, which I'm sure somebody more knowledgeable will be able to do soon.
Your understanding is correct.
HMRC have an 'approved amount' of 45p a mile (for the first 10,000 miles) that an employer can pay in respect of business mileage without having to apply PAYE.
This is just HMRC making life easy; the actual cost per mile of running a particular car will almost certainly not be 45p a mile. It could be less, or it could be more, it all depends. Employers can please themselves as to what mileage rate (if any) they decide to pay. But if they pay less than 45p a mile, the employee can claim Mileage Allowance Relief on the 'shortfall'.Steppy1234 wrote: ».. All her mileage has been recorded over the year and a form P87 was submitted. The form worked out that the “Total net allowable expenses you are claiming for the year” was £829.50 and my daughter took it that this was the figure she would be receiving from the tax man. (5530 business miles @ 45p= £2488.50. 30p per mile already paid £1659, difference being £829.50)..
The £829.50 is the total of Mileage Allowance Relief, your daughter has claimed it as an allowable expense against her taxable income. Assuming she is a basic rate tax payer, she should receive £169.50.
That's the way it works.0 -
She needs to be a basic rate payer and have paid sufficient tax to get the full benefit of the claim.
If she is low paid or part time (or both) and has only paid say £100 tax then she can only get £100 back.
I don't quite agree with antrobus's figures though. Even if she is a basic rate payer who has paid enough tax (and her tax code was otherwise correct) then I would think she's more likely to get £164, not £169.50.
She could ask her employer to explain this from your original post as it clearly isn't true (as explained in previous responses) but it could just as easily be due to a misunderstanding rather than deliberate misinformation on the employers part.
Work pay her 30p per mile travelled and informed her should be able to claim the extra 15p per mile from the tax man
In all honesty she could be worse off, there have been other posters on here who get paid nothing by their employer and others who have made a claim but receive no tax refund as their income is already so low they haven't paid any tax in the first place.0 -
Dazed_and_confused wrote: »I don't quite agree with antrobus's figures though. Even if she is a basic rate payer who has paid enough tax (and her tax code was otherwise correct) then I would think she's more likely to get £164, not £169.50
OP states 5530 business mile and so correctly calculates the net mileage expense claimable as £829.50
829.5 x 20% = 165.900 -
But the PAYE system of knocking the end digit of your tax allowance to create a tax code means we all end up owing a small amount at the end of the year which, for the op's daughter, will be taken into account when the actual tax position is calculated.
Standard code last year was 1100L so employers give allowances of 11009 throughout the year via the PAYE tax tables but when the tax is calculated only 11000 are actually due which results in a small amount of tax owed (£9 x 20% for basic rate payer) which will reduce the amount of repayment.0 -
Thank you all for your replies. I understand now, I can only assume someone has told her wrong about what she is able to claim back or she has misunderstood. She is only 21 and new to the working world and tax man. When I was googling this, I came across a 5p passenger allowance? due to the nature of her work, she does have to work in pairs and 9 times out of 10 ends up driving in her car. There is no record of this for the last tax year, but going forward if a record was kept, could this be claimed also? there was no mention of this on the p87 form. What sort of evidence would she need to keep?0
-
Steppy1234 wrote: »Thank you all for your replies. I understand now, I can only assume someone has told her wrong about what she is able to claim back or she has misunderstood. She is only 21 and new to the working world and tax man. When I was googling this, I came across a 5p passenger allowance? due to the nature of her work, she does have to work in pairs and 9 times out of 10 ends up driving in her car. There is no record of this for the last tax year, but going forward if a record was kept, could this be claimed also? there was no mention of this on the p87 form. What sort of evidence would she need to keep?0
This discussion has been closed.
Confirm your email address to Create Threads and Reply

Categories
- All Categories
- 351.1K Banking & Borrowing
- 253.1K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
- 453.6K Spending & Discounts
- 244.1K Work, Benefits & Business
- 599K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
- 177K Life & Family
- 257.4K Travel & Transport
- 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
- 16.1K Discuss & Feedback
- 37.6K Read-Only Boards