Chronicle said:
Hi
Thanks for your replies. I mean more about the legal side of things. I've read up a bit on the internet, seems its not too hard if i set myself up as a sole trader.
It'd dead easy to set yourself up as a sole trader. About the only thing you MUST do is notify the Inland Revenue that you've done so. You only have a limited time (30 days, 3 months, I don't remember) to do it.
But the implication of a sole trader is unlimited personal liability. If you do something that gets you sued, you have unlimited liability, which means your house, car, etc could all be at risk.
If you set up a limited company, you're only at risk to the extent of the assets of the company and to any unpaid share capital you have. So if the company has £100 shares of a nominal £1 each, and you own them all and have paid the £100 into the company, your personal liability (with an exception or two) ends there.
The exception is that you would presumably be a director of the company. As such, there are a LOT of things you are liable for. Also, the compnay will have a constitution which defines what directors can and can't do. If you wilfully break that, you can end up personally liable.
There's a large amount of extra detail in all this, but a web search ought to bring up most of it.
Perhaps the biggest single consideration is tax.
If you're a sole trader, you pay tax on taxable profits via personal taxes.
If you're a limited company, then it's the company makes receives any income. You then have to work out how to get it from the company to you. If you pay yourself a wage, that means the company pays things like Employer's NI on it, and once you've got it, you then pay employees NI and, of course, Income Tax on it.
If you don't take it out of the company as wages (which by and large is an tax-inefficient way of doing it), then it get's taxed via Corporation Tax, and any surplus can then be distributed to shareholders as dividends. You, of course, as an individual, have to declare such dividends to the Inland Revenue, and pay Income Tax on them (if you go over the relevant earnings levels, etc).
It's FAR to complex to go into any great detail in a post here, but I'm sure you can see that the tax implications of being a limited company or self-employed are a major factor, and that it needs careful investigation and consideration.
Oh, and the paperwork and administration involved in being self-employed is limited to keeping adequate accounts and filling in your tax return. There's a fair bit more involved with a company (like regular PAYE/NI returns, annual returns to Companies House, Corporation tax returns, and so on).