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-   -   Core i5/i7 1080p laptop (https://www.scoobynet.com/computer-and-technology-related-34/822499-core-i5-i7-1080p-laptop.html)

john banks 17 March 2010 07:51 PM

Core i5/i7 1080p laptop
 
Can you still claim 100% of the cost of IT equipment used exclusively for your business in the tax year in which it is bought?

I would like a 1080p screen as I do a lot of programming and my present 1280*800 is too cramped. The Core 2 Duo with 1MB is also slow for compiling large files and multitasking. Despite defragging and even when it has free RAM it keeps me waiting a lot.

Don't really need power 3d graphics but most 1080p laptops seem to have it.

Reliability and build quality are of reasonable important, battery life not critical.

Options: HP Envy 15, Dell Studio XPS 16, Sony Vaio F11, Mesh DX.

Opinions/alternatives?

Phil_b83 17 March 2010 10:00 PM

Acer Aspire 8942G and the Hp Pavillion DV8 would also fit your bill both at £1299, I'm gettin the Acer in a couple of months..

Neanderthal 18 March 2010 09:00 AM

I'm not 100% sure but I don't think you can claim 100% back in the first year. I think it's a percentage spread over 3 years.

Ray T 18 March 2010 10:50 AM

Think you can claim it all in the tax year upto a £50k limit not including cars, sure thats the way I read it.

Neanderthal 18 March 2010 11:07 AM

Well I've learnt something new!


Originally Posted by business link
To calculate the capital allowances you can claim for plant and machinery (P&M), first add up the cost of your qualifying expenditure on P&M (excluding cars):

if the total is £50,000 or less, you can claim 100 per cent of that amount as your Annual Investment Allowance (AIA)
if you have spent more than £50,000 on P&M in a year, add the amount over the AIA to any expenditure brought forward from previous years to make a 'main pool' of costs
You can claim a writing-down allowance (WDA) of 20 per cent on the value of this pool, with the remaining 80 per cent being carried forward into the next year. For example, if you spend £60,000 on P&M in a year, £50,000 of the expenditure falls under the AIA. The remaining £10,000 goes into the main pool. You can claim £2,000 WDA on this amount (£10,000 x 20 ÷ 100) and £8,000 is carried forward.

In certain cases you may also have incurred expenditure on P&M that qualifies for the 10 per cent special rate allowance. In such cases you will need to allocate that expenditure to the special rate pool and write it down at 10 per cent.

However, you may use your £50,000 AIA wholly or partly against this expenditure first, in preference to expenditure that qualifies at the 20 per cent rate. Any balance of expenditure after the AIA has been taken off will be included in the 'special rate pool' and will qualify for allowances at 10 per cent.

For example, you spend £100,000 on P&M in a year, £70,000 of which relates to main pool expenditure and £30,000 to special rate expenditure. You can allocate all the £30,000 special rate expenditure to the AIA and £20,000 of the main rate expenditure. The remaining £50,000 should be allocated to the main pool and written down at 20 per cent.

Note that for the 12-month period beginning on 1 April 2009 for Corporation Tax and 6 April 2009 for Income Tax, any new expenditure (excluding that on cars, leasing, and expenditure brought forward which continue to be written down at 20 per cent or the appropriate rate and special-rate expenditure of 10 per cent) temporarily qualifies for a 40 per cent WDA.

Also note that if you have incurred expenditure on purchasing energy-saving and water-efficient equipment, which qualify for a 100 per cent first-year allowances (FYA), and you have used up your AIA on other items, you can claim 100 per cent on that expenditure in the year you make the purchase, regardless of any other P&M expenditure. See our guide on first-year allowances.


john banks 18 March 2010 12:30 PM

Thanks. I think a screen about 15-16" would be ideal.

john banks 20 March 2010 11:19 AM

Bought a Dell Studio 15 with 1080p/7200RPM/4GB/i7. It has midrange graphics but it is not for games. A bigger laptop would not let the cat sit on my lap whilst working and my close vision is pretty sharp so the 1080p smallish screen should be OK ;)

Accountant says I can claim it all this tax year.

Rob_Impreza99 22 March 2010 08:35 PM

Have a look at Kobalt computers, what they sell will blow you away. You can customise the laptop to suit your own needs, i bought my current laptop from them.

Welcome to Kobalt Computers - High Performance Custom PCs and Notebooks


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