UK Cycle to Work Scheme
#1
Newbie
Thread Starter
UK Cycle to Work Scheme
The UK government have recently dropped the £1,000 upper limit on the value of a bike / equipment you can purchase under the Cycle to Work scheme. It is now at the employer's discretion to set the upper limit, which means the scheme is suddenly a lot more attractive.
Not for lack of looking, but I haven't found anything which explains what kind of overall saving you could expect on the value of the bike. It looks like you "rent" the bike for 12 months, with the monthly rent equal to bike cost / 12 less income tax, e.g. if you went for a £1,000 bike and pay 40% tax then you would pay £1,000 / 12 * 0.6 = £50 per month, or £600 after 12 months. What happens next though? Do you pay a balloon payment to buy the bike outright? Is it some residual value of the £400 left to pay?
Anyone got any practical experience of the savings they got out of the scheme?
Not for lack of looking, but I haven't found anything which explains what kind of overall saving you could expect on the value of the bike. It looks like you "rent" the bike for 12 months, with the monthly rent equal to bike cost / 12 less income tax, e.g. if you went for a £1,000 bike and pay 40% tax then you would pay £1,000 / 12 * 0.6 = £50 per month, or £600 after 12 months. What happens next though? Do you pay a balloon payment to buy the bike outright? Is it some residual value of the £400 left to pay?
Anyone got any practical experience of the savings they got out of the scheme?
#2
Cycleway town
And how does this affect people who already cycle to work on their own bike? Can we claim cash..?!
#3
Full Member
The UK government have recently dropped the £1,000 upper limit on the value of a bike / equipment you can purchase under the Cycle to Work scheme. It is now at the employer's discretion to set the upper limit, which means the scheme is suddenly a lot more attractive.
Not for lack of looking, but I haven't found anything which explains what kind of overall saving you could expect on the value of the bike. It looks like you "rent" the bike for 12 months, with the monthly rent equal to bike cost / 12 less income tax, e.g. if you went for a £1,000 bike and pay 40% tax then you would pay £1,000 / 12 * 0.6 = £50 per month, or £600 after 12 months. What happens next though? Do you pay a balloon payment to buy the bike outright? Is it some residual value of the £400 left to pay?
Anyone got any practical experience of the savings they got out of the scheme?
Not for lack of looking, but I haven't found anything which explains what kind of overall saving you could expect on the value of the bike. It looks like you "rent" the bike for 12 months, with the monthly rent equal to bike cost / 12 less income tax, e.g. if you went for a £1,000 bike and pay 40% tax then you would pay £1,000 / 12 * 0.6 = £50 per month, or £600 after 12 months. What happens next though? Do you pay a balloon payment to buy the bike outright? Is it some residual value of the £400 left to pay?
Anyone got any practical experience of the savings they got out of the scheme?
#4
Newbie
Thread Starter
i've used the cycle to work scheme twice now, and saved a bit of money, the monthly payment is deduced from your pre-tax salary and at the end of the 12 Months, you can either pay a 'own it now' or 'own it later' fee, the own it now is about 20% of the certificate value and the own it later is about 5%, which in affect extends your hire period for another 3 years at which point the bike is then yours. I've done the own it later on both of my schemes. My last bike I bought on interest free for 18months.
If you pay the "own it now" fee, do you know what the certificate value is? Is it the original list price of the bike, or something else?
If you pay the "own it later" fee, is it just a 5% one time fee, or do you also then pay something monthly for the extended 3 year period, or is it 5% spread over 3 years, or ...?
Hand on heart I've tried to get the answers on Google, but all the info seems very opaque.
Cheers
#5
Full Member
the certificate value is the total of what you borrowed, the own it later fee is a one off payment nothing else, then after 3 years the bike is yours, always do the own it later fee otherwise the scheme is pointless and you might as well take out a loan!
#7
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 8,550
Bikes: Wilier Izoard XP (Record);Cinelli Xperience (Force);Specialized Allez (Rival);Bianchi Via Nirone 7 (Centaur); Colnago AC-R Disc;Colnago V1r Limited Edition;De Rosa King 3 Limited(Force 22);DeRosa Merak(Red):Pinarello Dogma 65.1 Hydro(Di2)
Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 551 Post(s)
Liked 276 Times
in
144 Posts
#8
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2017
Location: Easton, MA
Posts: 632
Bikes: Specialized Ruby Sport
Mentioned: 5 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 318 Post(s)
Liked 314 Times
in
165 Posts
The noun has a similar negative connotation in the US. We would use plan or program rather than scheme. My company used to have an incentive bonus program for reaching certain milestones. My manager (who was from South Africa) always referred to it as the "bonus scheme". Always sounded vaguely shady to me referred to that way.
#9
Newbie
Thread Starter
I think I finally understand it If you go for the own it later option you're effectively saving yourself about 35% off the bike price. Assuming you pay 40% tax. Result. Thanks mate.
#10
Newbie
Thread Starter
The noun has a similar negative connotation in the US. We would use plan or program rather than scheme. My company used to have an incentive bonus program for reaching certain milestones. My manager (who was from South Africa) always referred to it as the "bonus scheme". Always sounded vaguely shady to me referred to that way.
Likes For rmwesley:
Likes For NomarsGirl:
#12
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 740
Mentioned: 4 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 359 Post(s)
Liked 85 Times
in
58 Posts
They are finally looking at a similar scheme to this in one State of Australia, alongside a scheme to incentivise people to ride.
We really are a backwards place given how long the British scheme has been in place.
There is also murmurs from groups trying to get a "Driver's insurance" system in place like you have in the UK.
It is hoped that this will get some of our bad drivers off the roads and also make some people modify their bad driving behaviours..
We really are a backwards place given how long the British scheme has been in place.
There is also murmurs from groups trying to get a "Driver's insurance" system in place like you have in the UK.
It is hoped that this will get some of our bad drivers off the roads and also make some people modify their bad driving behaviours..
#13
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: London, UK
Posts: 53
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 0 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 0 Times
in
0 Posts
It's worth asking your organisation's HR department (or whoever manages the scheme) about the specifics. At my employer you theoretically have to pay a sum at the end of the 12 months to properly "own" the bike, but in practice they make no effort to collect and never ask anyone to pay anything. As far as they are concerned after the initial 12 month period the bike belongs to you with nothing more to be paid.