News11 mins ago
tax on medical insurance
8 Answers
i pay £40 per month for private medical insurance, working out at £480 per year, however my company have given a figure of £550 to the taxman .on which i have to pay tax, they have given them this figure for the last 5 years ,even though 5 years ago i was only paying £336. can they do this or should they give the tax man the correct amount that i pay each year. thanks
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No best answer has yet been selected by g1057. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.This doesn't sound quite right to me. You only pay tax if it's a 'benefit in kind'. If you pay the full cost of the insurance out of after tax income then there should be no more liability for tax on this.
Perhaps you are only paying part of the actual cost with the employer subsidising the premiums. The employer's subsidy is then a benefit in kind on which you will be charged tax
Perhaps you are only paying part of the actual cost with the employer subsidising the premiums. The employer's subsidy is then a benefit in kind on which you will be charged tax
Photocopy documents with correct £ amount and anything related that will be useful and then present to employer with the request to ensure is sent asap to relevant department via fax for quick delivery and at some point your over paid money will be sent to you and will be something but will not be anytime soon .
I'm afraid I'm not following that one, northernmonkey. I thought buildersmate, g1057 and I had worked out that this tax treatment seemed to be correct- the benefit in kind that the company gives to HMRC is the value of the company's contribution to g1057's medical insurance. That seems to me to be the correct treatment. Unless we've misunderstood there is no overpaid money and I don't follow what you are suggesting.
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