Running a small business in Suffolk, Norfolk or the wider East Anglia region means every pound you legitimately save on tax is worth its weight in gold. Many business owners, especially sole traders or small limited companies, miss out on deductions simply because they do not know they exist. Below are ten often-overlooked deductions, fully anchored in HMRC guidance that can reduce your taxable profit. Use them carefully, keep proper records and always check that each cost meets HMRC’s strict “wholly and exclusively” test.

  1. Pre-trading expenses (costs incurred before you formally start)

If you incur costs to prepare your business before it officially trades, you may still be able to claim them as if they were incurred on day one of trading provided they satisfy certain conditions. Companies and sole traders can both use this relief. The expense must have been incurred within the past seven years, must not already be deductible, must be wholly for business and would have been allowable had you been trading.

For example, design work, marketing research or website setup paid six months before launch might qualify. Be cautious: costs like advance rent or stock purchases are often excluded.

  1. Use of home (office) costs apportionment

If you run your business from home, many owners forget to claim a share of household costs.

If you work from home 25 hours or more a month, you can claim a fixed monthly amount, HMRC flat rates for hours worked are:

  • £10 for 25–50 hours
  • £18 for 51–100 hours
  • £26 for 101 hours or more

This flat rate covers general running costs such as heating, lighting, electricity. You can still claim the business portion of phone and broadband bills separately.

If you prefer more accuracy, you can base your claim on a reasonable split of your actual household bills. HMRC doesn’t set a specific percentage, but your calculation should reflect:

  • Area – the proportion of your home used for business
  • Time – how long you use it for work
  • Usage – how much of the utilities or services are business-related

For example, if your workspace makes up 5% of your home, you might claim 5% of relevant bills. Whatever method you use, keep clear records or calculations showing how you arrived at your figures.

  1. Subscriptions and professional memberships

Small businesses often neglect to claim subscriptions to trade bodies, professional institutes, journals or industry associations if they are relevant to the business. The cost must be “wholly and exclusively” for the trade.

If the membership also provides non-business benefits (say, leisure), you must apportion accordingly.

HMRC has a list of the allowable professional bodies that they deem allowable as a business expense.

  1. Training tied to your business

Training that helps you maintain or improve skills directly relevant to your current trade is allowable. Courses to enter a wholly new trade are unlikely to qualify.

For example, a graphic designer learning a new software version may claim it; a designer retraining as a plumber would not.

  1. Repairs and maintenance of business assets

Many assume that any repair is disallowed, but repairs and maintenance to keep equipment operating are allowable (as revenue expenditure). This can include servicing machinery, replacing worn parts or repainting premises.

Just remember: upgrades or improvements to extend life may be capital in nature and thus dealt with via capital allowances, not expense.

  1. Bad debts (irrecoverable invoices)

If you have tried to collect from a client and failed, the cost of writing off the debt may be deductible. Many small firms forget this, leaving unpaid invoices that could otherwise reduce profits.

  1. Interest and bank charges on business finance

Interest on loans, overdrafts and other finance arrangements (so long as they are used wholly for business) can often be deducted. Also included are bank fees, charges and account keeping fees.

  1. Capital allowances on equipment / plant & machinery

Many small businesses under-claim capital expenditure. Rather than treating the full cost as a simple expense, you can typically claim it via capital allowances.

Significantly, the Annual Investment Allowance (AIA) allows you to deduct 100% of qualifying expenditure on plant and machinery (excluding most cars) up to a limit. From 1 April 2023 onwards, the AIA limit is permanently set at £1,000,000.

If expenditure exceeds the AIA threshold, you may use writing down allowances on the balance.

  1. Annual staff event cost (for limited companies)

A lesser-known relief: a limited company can host one event per year for staff (or all staff) and treat up to £150 per head as a deductible cost provided it is broadly open to all employees. Exceeding this limit may render the whole cost taxable.

  1. Use of motor vehicles – mileage allowances and simplified method

Transport and travel is a common area of oversight. If you use a vehicle for business journeys, you can claim allowable costs for fuel, insurance, repairs, servicing and other motoring costs, apportioned to business use.

However, journeys between home and your usual workplace (commuting) are disallowed.

As an alternative to calculating actual costs, HMRC offers a simplified mileage allowance:

  • 45p per mile for the first 10,000 business miles
  • 25p per mile thereafter
    (If you choose this, you cannot also claim detailed vehicle costs).

Many small businesses fail to match up journeys properly (e.g. between multiple sites) and lose out.

Making the most of your deductions

Each deduction above only works if you satisfy HMRC’s tests: the cost must be wholly and exclusively for the business, properly recorded, and only claimed for the business proportion where mixed use exists.

Begin by reviewing your expense categories: are there items you neglected or hesitated to claim? Then check whether they meet HMRC’s standards. Use appropriate apportionment methods (rooms, time, mileage) rather than blanket 100 % claims.

Particularly in East Anglia, where rural premises, home offices or regional travel are common, such deductions can make a noticeable difference to cash flow. But always keep full supporting evidence (invoices, mileage logs, contracts). HMRC may require proof for up to six years.

If you run a limited company and are unsure whether to classify a cost as an expense or capital allowance, or how to treat staff events or bad debt claims, discuss with a qualified accountant. Done carefully, these often-overlooked deductions can turn “missed opportunities” into legitimate savings.

Please see another An Accounting Gem blog: https://www.aag-accountants.co.uk/five-smart-ways-haulage-companies-can-cut-their-tax-bill/