Communities Secretary will today (28 March 2018)
introduce legislation that will reverse the impact of a
‘staircase tax’, which has unfairly affected up to a thousand
businesses.
A Supreme Court judgment saw hundreds of businesses that operate
in adjoining units or rooms, but are accessed from a common
corridor or staircase, receiving separate rate bills for each
unit.
The ruling also saw businesses facing higher rate bills, with
some paying more due to the loss of small business rate relief.
The introduction of the Bill means these firms will be able to
choose to have their rates recalculated under the old single bill
system and any savings due backdated.
Communities Secretary said:
For years firms in adjoining units or rooms rightly received
one rates bill, but this court ruling meant they faced multiple
bills for operating in an office linked by a communal lift or
stairs.
This was a completely unreasonable burden on businesses which
this legislation will put a stop to.
We’re giving those businesses affected the option of getting
their rates bills recalculated and any savings due backdated.
Subject to Parliamentary approval of the Bill, those businesses
who have been directly impacted by the Supreme Court judgement
can ask the Valuation Office Agency (VOA) to recalculate
valuations based on previous practice.
It can then have its bill recalculated if it chooses, and
backdated. This includes those firms who lost small business rate
relief.
The introduction of the legislation follows a decision in the
Supreme Court (Woolway v Mazars) which brought about a change the
practice of the Valuation Office Agency (VOA) in assessing
rateable values for businesses.
Following this ruling, businesses who occupied more than one
property in a shared building received a separate rates bill for
each unit. This was widely known as the ‘staircase tax’ and meant
businesses in adjoining units who had previously received one
rates bill, were now being subject to several bills. Some
businesses were paying more overall due to the loss of small
business rate relief – a discount applied to the bills of certain
businesses with a lower rateable value.
This ruling overturned an established and widely understood
practice where businesses occupying 2 adjoining floors or 2 rooms
separated by a wall only received a single bill.