Quote:
|
I always thought (for some reason) that dividends were only paid at the end of the company year. It seems not. So if I pay myself a dividend say on a quarterly basis, when does the tax (both corporation and my own income tax) become due? do I just declare it on my persoanl end of year tax return in the same way I would for income from shares in say Tesco or something?
|
- you can pay yourself a dividend daily as long as you get the paperwork right
- there is no payment of company tax associated with the payment of a dividend. ACT was abolished in 1999 for those of you who remember
- any of your dividend income that's subject to tax at the higher rate - the associated tax will become payable on the January 31st following the tax year in which the dividend was paid. Any dividend falling within the basic rate band is essentially tax-free. Your Tax return should have details of the dividends you've taken.
Quote:
|
Have you contemplated paying yourself, um, what do they call it these days, it's on the tip of my tongue? oh, yes, a salary?
|
zeitghost - taking a salary means paying national insurance. Unless you're profits are more than £300k then you should always pay a dividend instead of a bonus as it avoids the national insurance (this ignores pension contributions that you may want to pay based on a salary).