Don
You have nothing to worry about.
Right now I have it set up as me as the director and only Share Holder. I went LTD as there are other associated costs with PAYE which reduce the take home pay (Not just the higher TAX). One thing I need to look into is the Payroll for the £1041 I pay myself every month out of the business account (this equates to £12,500 a year which is TAX free), the accountancy can do it for me, but they charge £300 for it (£25/month), which seems a lot. I am going to contact HMRC tomorrow and try find out the procedure for it. My understanding of it is anything over the £12500 I pay myself out if the business account, I pay 7.5% on up to £45,000, above that it's 37.5%. There is also a £116 charge for something called a "Confirmation Statement" which I need to look into, plus £100+Vat for another charge that I didn't make a note of. I am going back in on Tuesday, I will ask some more questions there and find out if I really need to pay these fees or if it's something I can do myself. If I pay everything they ask, no questions asked it will cost me £1400 a year for the accountancy, to me that seems high, hence why I want to look into exactly what I am paying for.
since the tax credit was abolished does this remain the case?Giving you annual and ongoing guidance around the recommended salary, deductible expenses, what to pay to HMRC and when, how the tax rules are changing, do you know you need dividend vouchers when you issue dividends? What should they look like? When can you issue dividends? What do you do with VAT? Which VAT scheme is most appropriate for you, if any? etc.
since the tax credit was abolished does this remain the case?
cheers. the page looks familiar, so i've probably answered this question for myself before and forgotten.
Sorry I meant shareholder. Director's can be paid a pension though.@sinwave dividends can be paid to directors.
There’s some seriously misleading and incorrect advice in this thread.
I'm he'll live on that first £8,000 so don't really look at the first £8k. Just use a spreadsheet and you'll see how LISA trumps SIPP all day long when you factor income tax on withdrawal.Hang on a minute. dividends are payable to shareholders not directors.
i'd like to see the maths on that. you can pay an employee approximately 8000 without incurring employee national insurance contributions in respect of that employment, the company won't pay corporation tax on that 8000 and the employee can get all of that ~8000 into a SIPP without income tax touching it. I'm not sure of the status employer national insurance contributions in such situation
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either the employer can make a direct gross contribution to the SIPP (definitely no employer national insurance contributions) or the employee can receive it as salary and make a net contribution to the SIPP with the taxed component added back within the SIPP
There is also a £116 charge for something called a "Confirmation Statement"
I don’t see the loan charge as retrospective, people were clearly abusing loaning themselves money with no intention of ever paying it back, it was pretty much tax evasion in my opinion and it’s no wonder that now HMRC have won court cases over it that they are now going after anyone and everyone they know were engaged in those types of schemes with the expectation they will be paying the tax fully. You’re only quibble is how much and over how long you get to pay it back.Also, do not discount any future retro laws to tackle IR35. There's a big debate in the HoL and HoC over the past couple of months over the retrospective 2019 Loan Charge (which goes back 20 years) and many commentators and tax experts have discussed that if it is allowed to be implemented unchallenged, retro IR35 may well be next.
very fair point, i was looking at it purely academically from the mathematical standpoint without taking into account the living consideration, however first 8k becomes first 16k if he pays director's remuneration to a partner.I'm he'll live on that first £8,000 so don't really look at the first £8k. Just use a spreadsheet and you'll see how LISA trumps SIPP all day long when you factor income tax on withdrawal.
coolAnd yes, sorry I meant shareholder. I have corrected my post.
Lisa is 4k max a year with a 1k top up, correct? 20%
isn't this essentially the same as a SIPP except for cash flow and potential differences in tax regime or marginal rate in a given year. you pay any tax due on income before putting it into an ISA wrapper, whereas with a SIPP you pay no tax until you take money from it.
a benefit of the LISA being that you can choose to take the money out at any time subject to sacrifice of the top up, with interest.
I don’t see the loan charge as retrospective, people were clearly abusing loaning themselves money with no intention of ever paying it back, it was pretty much tax evasion in my opinion and it’s no wonder that now HMRC have won court cases over it that they are now going after anyone and everyone they know were engaged in those types of schemes with the expectation they will be paying the tax fully. You’re only quibble is how much and over how long you get to pay it back.
I know people, very intelligent people no doubt, that convinced themselves that not having to pay tax was perfectly acceptable with HMRC. As always, if it’s too good to be true!
Though it is sad to hear people getting tax bills for £100k’s with a due date last month or whenever it was, I don’t really have much sympathy for them.
it was pretty much tax evasion in my opinion and it’s no wonder that now HMRC have won court cases over it t
so easier to hit the easy targets who dont have the resources to defend themselves.
HMRC won't help you. You're asking some extremely basic questions. For example, you are over the NI threshold and will pay NI on some of that monthly salary at a £12.5k annual salary. Are you aware of that? Pay for an accountant for a year and if you feel confident, try to do it yourself the next year or get an accountant to only do your accounts and returns. Contractor accounting at £120 per month is about market rates. You obviously have no idea how much work is involved for the accountant. To give you an overview:
If you're not happy with the quote, ask friends and look around. You'll find they're all similar but the service you receive might vary. Look for accountants focused on cloud accounting as it will make things more efficient.
- Setting you up as a client - drafting an engagement letter, doing money laundering checks, asking HMRC to confirm them as an agent, etc.
- Giving you annual and ongoing guidance around the recommended salary, deductible expenses, what to pay to HMRC and when, how the tax rules are changing, do you know you need dividend vouchers when you issue dividends? What should they look like? When can you issue dividends? What do you do with VAT? Which VAT scheme is most appropriate for you, if any? etc.
- Drafting your monthly payroll, reviewing and submitting (fairly easy via cloud software but then there is the associated tasks like pension compliance, setting up the payroll with HMRC, etc).
- Reviewing your accounts (which will be shocking), amending, querying with you, preparing the annual accounts, submitting.
- Preparing your company tax return.
- Preparing your personal tax return.
- Potentially doing your quarterly VAT return.
- Doing your confirmation statement (previously known as an annual return)
Don't do it yourself. You will screw it up (see example here). You might get penalties. Only being honest. Some people do a lot of research and get by for themselves. Some people are lucky that they've never been caught screwing things up.
@sinwave dividends can be paid to directors.
There’s some seriously misleading and incorrect advice in this thread.
...Lots of useful stuff here to pay attention to...
then we had APNs (a dreadful piece of legislation which means that HMRC decide if and when you owe money, and get you to pay it upfront until such time a court decides otherwise - forcing many into insolvency as a result, despite no court ever having found they had done anything wrong).
Now we have Loan arrangements which have been used for over 2 decades. Some were forced into these arrangements by their employers and/or agencies. Others declared these arrangements on their self assessment returns. HMRC stayed silent - in some cases, they sent letters saying they could find no fault with these arrangements, and some were even given tax refunds (!). HMRC litigated against the schemes for years, but the courts always found them to be legal.
Then we come onto the 2019 Loan Charge - an almost genius piece of legislation which allows HMRC to "retro-actively" tax individuals (not employers - as the court found) in cases where their normal time limits would have prevented them from doing so. The legislation passed largely unscrutinised in 2017, yet the effect of it can go back as far as 1999 (how anyone can argue this is not retrospective is beyond me).
The similarities are uncanny. HMRC lose case after case in the courts (as they have done with IR35) and eventually introduce a retrospective law to capture everyone they deemed to have owed tax.
You are obviously experienced and know what you are talking about so my question is, for someone with no prior knowledge of accounting, are either of these things simple to do on my own, or should I pay for them to be done for me?? I have no issue at all paying the accountant to do them, but only if it's advisable, if either of them are straight forward to do then why not just do them myself and save £400. I have also written down there is a £120 charge for something else that I didn't make a note of, I will have to find out what that is on Tuesday.