Rules on selling cars, how many before i'm a 'trader'?

Rules on selling cars, how many before i'm a 'trader'?

Author
Discussion

tuscan_al

Original Poster:

4,107 posts

214 months

Tuesday 7th July 2009
quotequote all
If I was to start selling the cars I buy and do this say once a month, does this make me a trader? Would I have to advertise it so on autotrader etc? The cars would all be registered in my name, and then used insured etc as mine, then just sold on once I'm bored. I have read/heard things about only being able to sell 6 per year?? Does it make a difference too if I make a profit on these?


rfn

4,530 posts

207 months

Tuesday 7th July 2009
quotequote all
IIRC Autotrader will only let you sell three cars in a 12 months period before asking you to become a "Trader" on there.

slipstream 1985

12,219 posts

179 months

Tuesday 7th July 2009
quotequote all
i used to do it made a good profit on alot of them. best was a saxo vtr lovely black alloys cd player 115k miles bought for 800 spring broke and ruinied the tyre 250 bill total sold for £1300. need to make sure your selling whats in demand. big boats eg laguna vectra's hard to make money on. saxo's etc easy but make sure its got a long mot. its the mot that sells them.

smartie

2,604 posts

273 months

Tuesday 7th July 2009
quotequote all
As far as HMRC are concerened, you are a trader if you buy car with the express intention of reselling to make a profit, be it 1 car a year or 10 a week.

V8mate

45,899 posts

189 months

Tuesday 7th July 2009
quotequote all
smartie said:
As far as HMRC are concerened, you are a trader if you buy car with the express intention of reselling to make a profit, be it 1 car a year or 10 a week.
This ^^

Balmoral Green

40,882 posts

248 months

Tuesday 7th July 2009
quotequote all
V8mate said:
smartie said:
As far as HMRC are concerened, you are a trader if you buy car with the express intention of reselling to make a profit, be it 1 car a year or 10 a week.
This ^^
And even if you don't make a profit, it still stands, along with all the associated liability under the SOGA

But if you just chop and change a lot, like car chic on here does, you're not.

bmw2002

8,596 posts

224 months

Tuesday 7th July 2009
quotequote all
tuscan_al said:
If I was to start selling the cars I buy and do this say once a month, does this make me a trader? Would I have to advertise it so on autotrader etc? The cars would all be registered in my name, and then used insured etc as mine, then just sold on once I'm bored. I have read/heard things about only being able to sell 6 per year?? Does it make a difference too if I make a profit on these?
So is it going to Tuscan_Arfur then? smile

edo

16,699 posts

265 months

Tuesday 7th July 2009
quotequote all
I change cars pretty often mainly due to a lack of attention span. My wife sold her Mercedes for a profit after 6,000 miles and 4 months, but that was market conditions - doesnt make me (or her) a trader. Friends have suggested we get bunting on the drive!

sday12

5,053 posts

211 months

Tuesday 7th July 2009
quotequote all
slipstream 1985 said:
i used to do it made a good profit on alot of them. best was a saxo vtr lovely black alloys cd player 115k miles bought for 800 spring broke and ruinied the tyre 250 bill total sold for £1300. need to make sure your selling whats in demand. big boats eg laguna vectra's hard to make money on. saxo's etc easy but make sure its got a long mot. its the mot that sells them.
D+
Try reading the question before answering.
Don't write as if you were speaking.
Must try harder.

markcoznottz

7,155 posts

224 months

Tuesday 7th July 2009
quotequote all
tuscan_al said:
If I was to start selling the cars I buy and do this say once a month, does this make me a trader? Would I have to advertise it so on autotrader etc? The cars would all be registered in my name, and then used insured etc as mine, then just sold on once I'm bored. I have read/heard things about only being able to sell 6 per year?? Does it make a difference too if I make a profit on these?
If you are buying to sell on and make a profit, and lets be honest why do it if you dont aim to make a reasonable sum, then you're a business, or a trader in HMRCs eyes. There is no 'magic number' that you can sell a year before they take an interest. HMRC will find out you are selling from home WHEN not IF your neighbours/ supposed mates inform them. Where will you keep these vehicles?, how will you get them back to your house , or to an mot station or garage without trade plates?. More importantly where will you buy your vehicles from , given even seasoned motor trade buyers cant find vehicles at the moment, you wont be able to buy trade-ins from either garages or the auctions, because A) your not VAT registered, and B) they have thier own 'guys' they sell too; its an extremely cliquey trade. The auctions have recently introduced a penalty charge for paying in cash, forcing you to have a card, name address etc on file ;easy pickings for HMRC. Which valeter/ mechanic/ dent man / windscreen guy/ smart repairer wheel - reconditioner/ mot / towbar /tyre people will you use, because the good companies close to you wont drop well established trade work for a chancer like you (no offence mate). Its not as easy as people think. Im going to sit back and wait for the stock answer.........' im going to valet my own cars'.... .... course you are.

V8mate

45,899 posts

189 months

Tuesday 7th July 2009
quotequote all
markcoznottz said:
tuscan_al said:
If I was to start selling the cars I buy and do this say once a month, does this make me a trader? Would I have to advertise it so on autotrader etc? The cars would all be registered in my name, and then used insured etc as mine, then just sold on once I'm bored. I have read/heard things about only being able to sell 6 per year?? Does it make a difference too if I make a profit on these?
If you are buying to sell on and make a profit, and lets be honest why do it if you dont aim to make a reasonable sum, then you're a business, or a trader in HMRCs eyes. There is no 'magic number' that you can sell a year before they take an interest. HMRC will find out you are selling from home WHEN not IF your neighbours/ supposed mates inform them. Where will you keep these vehicles?, how will you get them back to your house , or to an mot station or garage without trade plates?. More importantly where will you buy your vehicles from , given even seasoned motor trade buyers cant find vehicles at the moment, you wont be able to buy trade-ins from either garages or the auctions, because A) your not VAT registered, and B) they have thier own 'guys' they sell too; its an extremely cliquey trade. The auctions have recently introduced a penalty charge for paying in cash, forcing you to have a card, name address etc on file ;easy pickings for HMRC. Which valeter/ mechanic/ dent man / windscreen guy/ smart repairer wheel - reconditioner/ mot / towbar /tyre people will you use, because the good companies close to you wont drop well established trade work for a chancer like you (no offence mate). Its not as easy as people think. Im going to sit back and wait for the stock answer.........' im going to valet my own cars'.... .... course you are.
Great answer.

Just to add: a friend of mine works for HMRC in their 'investigations' department. Whilst tip-offs are welcome, they don't sit there waiting for them. They are constantly scouring local small ads, ebay, AT etc looking for additional info. And then they cross-check it and match snippets they find with general 'stuff' they find about you on the we. Then they mix in a large dose of 'state-held information' about you.

Google your name.
Then Google your telephone number.
The Google your street.
And so on and so on.

confused_buyer

6,615 posts

181 months

Tuesday 7th July 2009
quotequote all
If you are considered a trader then you are more likely to get caught by the VAT office before income tax. If you do one a month then that's 12 cars a year - if they're over £5k then you'll be over the registration limit.

There is no reason why you can't change your personal car as often as you like but if you do make a profit eventually they'll catch up with you. If, on the other hand, you usually make a loss or break even they'll leave you alone as you can then claim back trading losses against your overall tax bill. They won't want that!

Also be aware that if you are in the grey area on trading your insurance is almost certainly invalid as nearly all specifically exclude motor trade use.

snuffle

1,587 posts

182 months

Tuesday 7th July 2009
quotequote all
V8mate said:
markcoznottz said:
tuscan_al said:
If I was to start selling the cars I buy and do this say once a month, does this make me a trader? Would I have to advertise it so on autotrader etc? The cars would all be registered in my name, and then used insured etc as mine, then just sold on once I'm bored. I have read/heard things about only being able to sell 6 per year?? Does it make a difference too if I make a profit on these?
If you are buying to sell on and make a profit, and lets be honest why do it if you dont aim to make a reasonable sum, then you're a business, or a trader in HMRCs eyes. There is no 'magic number' that you can sell a year before they take an interest. HMRC will find out you are selling from home WHEN not IF your neighbours/ supposed mates inform them. Where will you keep these vehicles?, how will you get them back to your house , or to an mot station or garage without trade plates?. More importantly where will you buy your vehicles from , given even seasoned motor trade buyers cant find vehicles at the moment, you wont be able to buy trade-ins from either garages or the auctions, because A) your not VAT registered, and B) they have thier own 'guys' they sell too; its an extremely cliquey trade. The auctions have recently introduced a penalty charge for paying in cash, forcing you to have a card, name address etc on file ;easy pickings for HMRC. Which valeter/ mechanic/ dent man / windscreen guy/ smart repairer wheel - reconditioner/ mot / towbar /tyre people will you use, because the good companies close to you wont drop well established trade work for a chancer like you (no offence mate). Its not as easy as people think. Im going to sit back and wait for the stock answer.........' im going to valet my own cars'.... .... course you are.
Great answer.

Just to add: a friend of mine works for HMRC in their 'investigations' department. Whilst tip-offs are welcome, they don't sit there waiting for them. They are constantly scouring local small ads, ebay, AT etc looking for additional info. And then they cross-check it and match snippets they find with general 'stuff' they find about you on the we. Then they mix in a large dose of 'state-held information' about you.

Google your name.
Then Google your telephone number.
The Google your street.
And so on and so on.
Add on the additional hassle from local council for trading from an unsuitable (residential) site
also Trading Stardards seem to like having a look around getmecoat
I traded for a number of years, although I made money I hated the time.

tuscan_al

Original Poster:

4,107 posts

214 months

Tuesday 7th July 2009
quotequote all
Thanks for all the useful advice, I shall pass it onto the relevant party wink I never plan to make a profit, just wondered where u stand if you do.. Wonder how many people who buy at list then sell for profit ( Audi R8 / GTR's ) declare their 10k + profits ??

Your trader_al biggrin

Mr POD

5,153 posts

192 months

Tuesday 7th July 2009
quotequote all
I have a mate who dabbles in bargain bucket car sales rarely buying for more than £300 and rarely selling for more than £600. He declares he is a trader, offers an honest description and has trade insurance. He declares profit after costs (Which are higher than you think,) are taken out through a limited company, and takes a dividend twice a year from the business. He pays 21 % corporation tax on the small profits 9 months after the end of his financial year and 10% tax on the Dividend. He has a proper PAYE job, and the dividend pays for a holiday in the summer and for christmas.

I can't see why going legitimate is so bad.