Monday, 21 August 2023

Has the Revaluation Balanced Business Rates?

In March, the Non-Domestic Rating Bill was introduced in the House of Commons. This was the result of a lengthy review into the modernisation of the business rates system. A big component of this new bill is more frequent revaluations. Supposedly, this is to ensure that information on commercial property’s is updated more frequently and is therefore more accurate.

Attempting to modernise the tax system is nothing new. It's a fairly common request among business owners and leaders, and one ratings companies see on a daily basis. One that picks up steam momentarily around a new rating list. 

While shorter periods of time do offer the opportunity to update information more quickly, it is just that – an opportunity to do so. Without swift and dedicated involvement on behalf of the Valuation Office Agency (VOA), a shorter revaluation doesn't immediately offer a solution that fits everyone.

Requiring the relevant knowledge and expertise, which is information held by the VOA, business rates payers cannot challenge their liability without engaging the assistance and expertise of a specialist. 

The amount of time needed alone to take out of running a business to do so, is simply infeasible for many. Let alone having a complex knowledge of the inner workings of the whole business rates tax system"

So, how has the revaluation helped business rates payers?

Currently, the 2023 rating list is set to last for three years. For most, the only difference they'll have noticed is an increase that's simply going to stay elevated. So how has the revaluation helped businesses?

Challenging your business rates liability requires a tremendous amount of expertise. Whilst the VOA have the tools necessary to do so, they don't offer them to business rates payers to help individuals do so.

“We’ve said it before, and we’re going to keep saying it," opined Anthony Hughes, MD at RVA Surveyors, who laughed at the idea/

He went on to say: “Unless each individual commercial property is inspected within the three-year rating list, based on its own merits and unique assets, the information held by the VOA can never be entirely accurate. It's well within their ability to inspect every property within a rating list to ensure accuracy before a new revaluation. They have the manpower; they just need to have the willpower to do so.”

After a tumultuous few years, which saw businesses closing at an alarming rate, a support package for businesses was quickly put into place. Included in this was freezing the multipliers. During Covid, expanded retail relief was renamed Retail Hospitality and Leisure (RHL) which now covers 75% of the rates payable. 

UK Hospitality’s latest analysis predicts that an increase in business rates and the end of such reliefs will see an additional increase of £850 million in the next financial year for those in the hospitality industry alone.

While these have appeared as huge boons for business rates payers, they do come with limitations.

When the sticking plaster is removed, business owners and leaders will still be expected to pay the full liability. Many businesses will run foul and insolvencies will obviously increase. In the second quarter of 2023, there was an over 13% rise in insolvencies compared to the second quarter of 2022.

David Kelly, Head of Insolvency at PwC, said: "The data shows the UK has had the highest quarterly number (6,342) of company insolvencies since the financial crisis in 2009. In total, in the first half of 2023, there were approximately 13,000 corporate failures.”

Due to a crippling economic outlook, many business rates payers are still struggling as people tighten their purse strings. While revaluations offer the opportunity for more accurate and fairer business rates, it's the actions of the VOA and government agencies which will determine what effect it has for business owners and leaders.

https://www.rvasurveyors.com

(Image courtesy of  Peggy from Pixabay)

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