Capital allowances let the company deduct the car's cost against taxable profits — not all at once, but spread over time using the Writing Down Allowance (WDA).
Which pool?
- EV New zero-emission cars: 100% First-Year Allowance (write off the entire cost in year 1)
- EV Used zero-emission cars: main rate pool — 14% WDA (from April 2026, was 18%)
- ICE CO2 ≤ 50g/km: main rate pool — 14% WDA
- ICE CO2 > 50g/km: special rate pool — 6% WDA
How reducing-balance WDA works
Each year you claim a percentage of the remaining pool value, not the original price:
- Year 1: £11,000 × 14% = £1,540 allowance. Pool balance: £9,460
- Year 2: £9,460 × 14% = £1,324 allowance. Pool balance: £8,136
- Year 3: £8,136 × 14% = £1,139 allowance. Pool balance: £6,997
- And so on…
Each allowance reduces your taxable profit and therefore your corporation tax bill.
Small pool write-off
If the pool balance falls below £1,000, you can write off the entire remaining amount in one go instead of continuing at 14%/yr.
Balancing allowance & charge on disposal
When you sell or scrap the car, compare the sale proceeds to the pool balance at that point:
- Pool > sale price → balancing allowance (extra tax relief on the difference)
- Sale price > pool → balancing charge (taxable, you "over-claimed")
This only applies cleanly if the car is the only asset in its pool. If the pool has other assets, the proceeds just reduce the pool balance.
FreeAgent Important distinction
FreeAgent calculates accounting depreciation (typically 25% reducing balance). This is not the same as HMRC's WDA (14% from April 2026).
- FreeAgent's depreciation feeds into your accounts — it's fine for management reporting
- On the CT600 (corporation tax return), you add back FreeAgent's depreciation and deduct the actual WDA capital allowance instead
- This is a standard adjustment — your CT600 filing software (or HMRC's online service) will have fields for this