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The Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme was put into place in the hope of minimising staff redundancies due to COVID-19.
The scheme is for employers of staff who would otherwise have been laid off due to the impact of COVID-19 in the UK. Instead of making staff redundant, employers can furlough their employees and claim a government grant to help them with employment costs.
The grant is to cover the cost of the hours that staff don’t work, with employers paying for any hours they do work as normal
The government’s most recent extension to the CJRS sees the employers’ contribution towards unworked hours slowly increase as the months pass, which we explain in more detail below.
The current rules will initially continue, with the government grant funding 80% of the hours which eligible employees don’t work. Funding through the grant is capped at a maximum of £2,500 per employee, per month.
As businesses reopen, from July 2021 employers will contribute 10% towards the unworked hours (a maximum of £312.50). The government grant will cover 70%, up to a maximum of £2,187.50.
In August and September, the employer contribution to unworked hours rises to 20% (to a maximum of £625), with the government paying 60%, capped at £1,875.
Previous versions of the CJRS grant have been paid in arrears, meaning that employers have had to up-front the cost themselves, before claiming the grant back. Crucially for employers’ cash flow, the scheme is now paid up-front.
The CJRS grant is open to any UK based employer with a PAYE scheme, although there are conditions for employee eligibility which we explain below.
As an employer you can claim financial support through the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme, even if you haven’t applied for previous versions of it.
Employee eligibility depends on which pay periods you need to claim the furlough grant for, and whether or not you have made a PAYE Real Time Information (RTI) submission to HMRC.
You can make a claim for the furlough grant for employees who were working for you on 30 October 2020. To be eligible, the employee must have been included on a RTI submission to HMRC between 20 March 2020 and 30 October 2020.
You can claim the furlough grant for employees who were employed on 2 March 2021. You must have made a PAYE Real Time Information (RTI) submission to HMRC between 20 March 2020 and 2 March 2021 which included that employee.
Employers can use the CJRS to claim for a minimum period of 7 days. These must be consecutive days.
Directors have been able to claim the CJRS grant through previous versions of the scheme, so it’s expected this will still be the case. The difficulty for company directors is that they typically take a lower salary as an employee through payroll, and then top this up with dividends. Because the scheme is based on what goes through payroll, directors of limited companies might not be able to claim much support.
When the scheme first launched furloughed staff were not permitted to work, but subsequent versions of the scheme have been more flexible.
So, this means that you might:
From an employee’s perspective, they’re also allowed to freelance whilst on furlough, or continue working for another employer as usual.
The Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme guidance refers to your employee’s usual hours. Our table shows you how to work out usual hours, depending on whether your employee works a fixed number of hours or variable hours.
What are usual hours for employees who work a fixed number of hours? | What are usual hours for employees who work a variable number of hours? |
Fixed hours mean that the employee is contracted to work the same number of hours each pay period. | Working variable hours means that your employee isn’t contracted to work a set number of hours, and you pay them depending on the hours they work. |
The calculation for working out fixed hours comes directly from HMRC guidance which includes working examples.
In your calculation, include periods where the employee was on leave, off sick, or had family statutory leave as if the leave had not been taken. |
The usual hours will be the greater of either:
OR
|
Staff that are still able to work from home should do so whilst receiving their normal salary. The Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme is only for the hours that employees are unable to work due to the COVID-19 outbreak.
The grant is for claims which cover 1st November 2020 onwards, though employers have not yet been told when they’ll be able to submit their claims for that period.
The Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme has now been further extended, and will operate until the end of September 2021.
To use the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme, you will need to report:
Yes, an employee can give notice that they’re leaving an employer even while furloughed under the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme. Being on furlough doesn’t affect their normal contractual rights.
Yes, HMRC confirm that they start publishing the details of furlough claims from December 2020 onwards. The information is to be available on the GOV.UK website, showing:
This means that if we submit a furlough claim on your behalf, HMRC will publish this information.
Employees will also be able to see the details of claims made for them, by viewing their Personal Tax Account.
HMRC have more information about this here.
Visit our Business Support for COVID-19 information hub, or talk to one of the team about our online accountancy services. Call 020 3355 4047, or request a free call back.
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