Statutory Instruments

2010 No. 1677

Excise

The Gaming Duty (Amendment) Regulations 2010

Made

24th June 2010

Laid before the House of Commons

24th June 2010

Coming into force

1st October 2010

Citation and commencement

1.  These Regulations may be cited as the Gaming Duty (Amendment) Regulations 2010 and come into force on 1st October 2010.

Interpretation

2.  In these Regulations “quarter” means the first three months of an accounting period.

Application and revocation

3.—(1) These Regulations apply in the case of payments on account of gaming duty for any quarter that ends on or after 31st October 2010.

(2) The Gaming Duty (Amendment) Regulations 2008(2) are revoked.

The amount of payments on account

4.  For the purpose of calculating payments on account of gaming duty in the cases to which these Regulations apply, substitute the following Table for the Table in regulation 5 of the Gaming Duty Regulations 1997(3):

Table

Part of gross gaming yieldRate
The first £987,50015 per cent
The next £680,75020 per cent
The next £1,192,50030 per cent
The next £2,516,75040 per cent
The remainder50 per cent

Bernadette Kenny

Melanie Dawes

Two of the Commissioners for Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs

24th June 2010

EXPLANATORY NOTE

(This note is not part of the Regulations)

These Regulations amend regulation 5 of the Gaming Duty Regulations 1997 (S.I. 1997/2196) which deals with the amount of payments on account. They substitute a new Table reflecting changes to the bands of gross gaming yield for gaming duty made by section 20 of the Finance Act 2010 (c. 13)(4), and will apply in the case of payments on account of gaming duty for any quarter that ends on or after 31st October 2010.

The duty rates in the table are those for the first three months of each six-monthly accounting period, hence the bands represent half of the new bands of gross gaming yield shown in section 20 of the Finance Act 2010. The interim quarterly payments under these Regulations are intended to be roughly half of the expected duty liability for the six-monthly period.

A full and final Impact Assessment has not been produced for this instrument as a negligible impact on the private or voluntary sectors is foreseen.

(1)

1997 c. 16; section 10 (amended by section 11 of the Finance Act 2002 (c.23), section 105 of, and part 4 of Schedule 25 to, the Finance Act 2007 (c. 11), S.I. 2007/2910 and sections 114(1) to 114(9) of the Finance Act 2009 (c. 10)) defines “gaming duty”; section 15(2) provides for sections 10 to 14 and Schedule 1 to be construed as one with the Customs and Excise Management Act 1979 (c. 2); section 1(1) of that Act as amended by section 50(6) of, and paragraphs 20 and 22(b) of Schedule 4 to, the Commissioners for Revenue and Customs Act 2005 (c. 11) defines “the Commissioners” as meaning the Commissioners for Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs; section 15(3) defines “accounting period”.

(2)

S.I. 2008/1949, which substituted a new Table for the Table in regulation 5 of the Gaming Duty Regulations 1997 (S.I. 1997/2196).

(3)

S.I. 1997/2196; relevant amending instruments are S.I. 2008/1949, 2009/2046.

(4)

Section 20 amends section 11(2) of the Finance Act 1997, which specifies which parts of the gross gaming yield are to be subject to gaming duty rates of 15, 20, 30, 40 and 50 per cent.