Katherine Traynor and David Gregory consider the implications of an important Supreme Court decision
Question
I am a director of a company limited by guarantee and established exclusively for charitable purposes (ie for the public benefit). The company is registered as a charity and fulfils its purposes in a number of different premises. Although it has a charitable purpose, the company’s primary source of revenue is fees charged to members of the public for services provided. The billing authority has sent business rate demands. I believe the company can claim mandatory relief under sections 43(5) and (6)(a) of the Local Government Finance Act 1988. The billing authority has disagreed, on the basis that the premises are not used for charitable purposes, and has asked the company to demonstrate the charitable purpose for a particular site. Is the company entitled to relief from business rates?
Answer
If the company has charitable status and operates over multiple sites, it is entitled to obtain business rates relief on its premises without having to demonstrate that the specific activities carried out at each site would have qualified as charitable in their own right.
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