Having visited various museums/attractions during a break in Cumbria this past week something has me puzzled.
Does anyone know why some venues charge a higher (approx. 10% more) admission fee in order that you are able to Gift Aid, whilst others only require that you pay the standard entry fee in order to do so?.
Thought museums were free?
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
Not all museums are free darrsi. I could call my garage a museum and charge a fiver for entry.
I don't know YamFazFan, maybe some are run by charities and some are private museums. The entrance fee being set by what they think people will pay. Too low and they'll be very busy for little return, too high and they'll have no-one coming in.
(21-07-18, 05:00 AM)Hugh Mungus link Wrote: Not all museums are free darrsi. I could call my garage a museum and charge a fiver for entry.
I don't know YamFazFan, maybe some are run by charities and some are private museums. The entrance fee being set by what they think people will pay. Too low and they'll be very busy for little return, too high and they'll have no-one coming in.
Very true. What I object to are those Museums/Attractions that make you traipse the kids through their over priced gift shop before you can leave the place.
Treat everything in life the way a dog would- if you can't eat it or foc it, forget it.
Neither is the radar museum.
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(21-07-18, 09:12 AM)celticbiker link Wrote: Neither is the radar museum.
I can't find that one :lol
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
Gift Aid is a way charities can get more money, you donate £10 and they can claim 25% more back, and you can then claim tax relief on the £10 you donated in your annual tax return.
Most people will probably never claim the tax relief and if you do make a gift aid donation make sure it is for a bona fide charity or community sports club.
Err no. The system assumes you are proving the 'gift' to a registered charity and are paying it out of income taxed at the standard rate of 20%. The charity then claims back from HMRC the tax you have paid on it (at 20%). You cannot claim back anything, unless you pay tax at the higher rates of 40%or 45%. Then you can offset it against your total income, reducing your liability at the higher rate.
21-07-18, 07:35 PM
(This post was last modified: 21-07-18, 07:36 PM by fazersharp.)
(21-07-18, 09:12 AM)celticbiker link Wrote: Neither is the radar museum.
I was actually driving right past that not two days ago. From their website
Admission
Adults £10.00 :eek :eek :eek :eek
Over 60s £9.00 Students £5.00Children (6yrs - 16yrs) £5.00Family Ticket (2 Adults and up to 3 children) £25Family ticket -
imagine taking the kids there - they will never forgive you :z
I don't do rain or threat there of. dry rider only with no shame.
Nah, not for the kids but I had a really good day there.
Entry cost allows you to go back as many times as you want in 12 months.
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(21-07-18, 08:28 PM)celticbiker link Wrote: Nah, not for the kids but I had a really good day there.
Entry cost allows you to go back as many times as you want in 12 months.
Entry cost allows you to go back as many times as you want in 12 months. --Really -- go back :pokefun Maybe if it included the golf ball up the road that replaced it
I don't do rain or threat there of. dry rider only with no shame.