Capital allowances advisors

Each year millions of pounds of tax allowances and reliefs go unclaimed.

Tax issues are often overlooked or considered at a late stage in property transactions, but when the full suite of options for tax allowances are used proactively they can secure significant savings from acquisitions, disposals, developments and brown field remediations.

For many tax is a consequence, rather than a strategy. Working alongside our clients to deeply understand their circumstances we leverage tax reliefs to positively shape property strategies; maximising your potential, opportunities and savings across property transactions and developments.

We understand that commercial business drivers will always dominate property development and investment, but if tax allowances and reliefs are used strategically they can significantly enhance returns. Our experience means that we know where to introduce and implement tax allowance strategies for maximum effect.

Contact us

Construction claim assessment

Capital Allowances is a technical and specialist activity that requires an optimal blend of knowledge, experience, and attitude.

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Our services are provided by senior advisers that have performed at the highest level across a variety of service platforms. Accounting, surveying and property consultancy experience blends together a considered and mature approach to claim solutions. We assume a thorough approach is required in all client requests but wherever possible we adopt simple, clear and disclosed services.

We believe capital allowances are an essential aspect in any project armoury and an invaluable value engineering tool. The inclusion of capital allowances estimates to project viability, feasibility, and financial modelling studies is paramount to enable our clients to fully consider project scope and returns. Maximising capital allowances then becomes an intrinsic project element, providing confidence to clients, and all stakeholders and interested parties.

Having a range of understanding through plant and machinery allowances, general plant, integral features, super deductions and first year allowances, structure and buildings allowances, contributions, grants, repairs, etc requires a holistic experienced approach to evaluate the best approach required.

Strategic acquisition advice

Our consultants have 20 plus years of advising on large and complex transactions through proactive planning and negotiation.

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Best practice and a high level of understanding underpin capital allowances transaction strategies, whether in selling or buying scenarios. Adopting a bespoke forward-thinking strategy establishes a competitive advantage over the opposing transacting parties, and in this respect capital allowances is no different to client investment and negotiation advice. A little proactive planning using foresight and judgement goes a long way to providing knowledgeable and maximised tax outcomes.

The building fixtures environment has evolved many times over the last 20-30 years, with finally, in the last 5 years at least, HMRC achieving a greater level of control and transparency. Significant opportunities remain however, for both sellers and buyers through an understanding of seller structure and positioning, protection and creative use of allowances both unidentified or identified, or knowing the right information required at the right time out with the standard CPSE enquiries. The key to success is in engaging the right expert early.

Sectorising allowances

All industry sectors are unique but require a tailored and transferable approach of core disciplines.

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Our cross trained senior surveying and tax experts have a unique set of skills which are required to assess, evaluate, review and document optimised capital allowances claims for our clients. We believe that core capabilities are essential to maximise savings in all industry sectors including offices, hotels and leisure, healthcare, manufacturing and so on. Whilst some industries require a more truly specialised approach such as the water industry or previously sports stadia and grounds (safety at work), we are also firm advocates of establishing expert knowledge in our client sectors.

Years of experience in listening to our clients business ideas and aspirations has taught us where best to place our focus in building strategies to increase allowances and savings. Existing building alterations may throw up a high degree of incidental assets, hotel projects will include a significant amount of embellishments and finishes, and healthcare builds will contain a high incidence of protective and clean assets. We listen, we learn, and we understand to how best develop our services to serve our individual clients.

Land remediation relief

An extremely rewarding tax relief that necessitates a highly specialised level of qualitative due diligence.

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Capital allowances advice requires a good degree of technical due diligence and entitlement considerations, and a high focus on analytical cost skills. However, the extremely valuable land remediation relief requires an opposing approach. To secure this relief It is fundamentally important to carry out a thorough understanding and review of all relevant client, transaction, property, environmental considerations, remediation strategy, and relevant costs to advise clients property. Failure to do so could be very costly.

A full review of this tax relief by HMRC several years back resulted in higher levels of legislative entitlement to focus the financial benefit where previously intended. Robust due diligence is key and must be enacted with the both the client’s and project consultant’s assistance to enable full disclosure of all relevant case facts. Our consultants are highly motivated to ensuring all client’s take advantage of this valuable project saving but with the correct, detailed approach.

Key capital allowances contacts

Peter O'Brien

    • Principal & Managing Director
    • Valuation Advisory Services
peter.o'[email protected]

News and updates

Q1 2022 office investment up 25% against 10-year average, while occupier take-up slows following active last quarter

Q1 2022 office investment up 25% against 10-year average, while occupier take-up slows following active last quarter 11 May 2022

Avison Young releases quarterly analysis of regional office markets.

Avison Young has released its latest Big Nine office market update, covering the first quarter of 2022.

Occupier market

Following an extremely active Q4 2021, take-up reduced during Q1 2022, with a total of 1.1 million sq ft let across the Big Nine city centre markets. While the markets saw a 40% decrease from the previous quarter, which recorded figures far ahead of the long-term average, Q1 take-up fell just 17% below the 10-year quarterly average, with the 5-year quarterly rolling average changing by just 0.2%.

Bristol, Cardiff, and Newcastle were notable exceptions to the overall trend in quarterly activity. Bristol saw the highest take-up across the Big Nine, reaching 234,275 sq ft – which represents a 62% increase against the five-year average.

The amount of space on the market is still some 10% below the 10-year average, despite availability increasing by 4% in total during the quarter. Big Nine vacancy rates also showed a slight increase, moving from 8.1% at the end of Q4 2021 to 8.3% at the end of Q1.

Key statistics and highlights of Q1’s occupier activity:

  • Key deals in Bristol’s well-performing market included two lettings greater than 20,000 sq ft – the largest of which was 54,767 sq ft to Paymentsense at CEG’s speculative development, EQ. Separately, at Halo, Finzels Reach, Deloitte leased 22,500 sq ft.
  • In Cardiff, city centre take-up exceeded the 5-year average by 37% after more than a twofold increase on the amount of space let in Q4 2021. Cardiff also saw the largest deal of the quarter across all Big Nine cities, with BT taking more than 65,000 sq ft at 3 Capital Quarter.
  • Accounting for a third of all Q1 take-up, the professional services sector was particularly active. Key deals included Deloitte’s letting in Bristol, Shoosmiths’ letting of 16,383 sq ft at Haymarket Square, Edinburgh, and Clifford Chance’s 15,182 sq ft at The Lumen in Newcastle.
  • The TMT & Creative and Financial Services sectors were also significant sources of demand, accounting for 24% and 14% of take-up respectively.
  • There is currently 4.6 million sq ft of office development under construction across the Big Nine markets. Glasgow is the most active, with 1.1 million sq ft being built. Due to significant demand in the market, 97% of this has already been pre-let.
  • Headline rents saw an uptick: in Bristol, rents increased by over 10%, Newcastle’s growth was also significant, with rents increasing by 5.8%.

Charles Toogood, Principal and Managing Director, National Offices Team at Avison Young, said:

“Demand for the best quality space has not eased over Q1. As pressure on headline rents continues, many Big Nine markets experienced rental growth with the average net effective rent increasing by 3% in only three months.”

Investment market

During the first quarter of 2022, £755 million of office investment was seen across the total Big Nine regional office markets. This total reflects a 21% increase on the amount spent in Q4 2021 and a 25% uptick against the 10-year average.

Overseas investors dominated the markets – accounting for 74% of total volumes across just six deals – with three overseas deals completed in excess of £100 million.

Glasgow and Bristol were the primary locations for Big Nine investment this quarter, accounting for 28% and 25% of spend respectively, driven by the largest deals of the quarter. Meanwhile, Manchester and Liverpool saw yield compression, both moving down by 25 basis points.

With demand focused on the best quality assets, the yield gap between prime and secondary property continues to widen. According to the MSCI quarterly index, it was 280 basis points at the end of December, compared to 228 at the end of 2019.

Key statistics and highlights of Q1’s investment activity:

  • The most significant deal of the quarter was the Spanish investment firm Pontegadea Group purchasing 177 Bothwell Street, Glasgow for circa £215 million, reflecting a desire for assets promoting occupier wellbeing.
  • In Bristol, US Investor Barings acquired the Soapworks offices scheme on Straight Street for £126 million, reflecting a net initial yield of 4%; while in Leeds, the White Rose Office Park was purchase by Belgian investor Immobel for £110 million, which reflected a net initial yield of 6.75%.
  • The MSCI monthly index has moved out slightly and ended March at 7.6%, compared to 7.5% at the end of 2020.

Mark Williams, Principal and Managing Director, Regional Investment Avison Young, said:
“Demand is increasingly focused on the best quality assets, with future proofed and well-located buildings consistently proving to be popular. Meeting net zero carbon investment criteria, promoting occupier well-being, and fulfilling expectations for positive rental growth are also a big draw, as we saw in the most significant deal of the quarter.”

To read the full research update on Big Nine office markets (Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester and Newcastle), click here.

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