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Today's BBC Moneybox programme (Personal and Small Business Tax)
Ironically, as a higher rate tax payer on PAYE, you'd be quite a lot better off in receiving dividends above the higher rate limit versus the current approach (up to about 22k of dividends, where the effect of the 5k wears off).
Likewise, anyone caught by IR35 on a decent rate (i.e. high rate from their deemed salary with profits remaining front the 5% allowance) are also going to be better off because they will pay a much lower marginal rate of tax on the dividends from the 5% allowance if they chose to withdraw them.
Likewise, anyone caught by IR35 on a decent rate (i.e. high rate from their deemed salary with profits remaining front the 5% allowance) are also going to be better off because they will pay a much lower marginal rate of tax on the dividends from the 5% allowance if they chose to withdraw them.
Martin
Contratax Ltd
Ha, yes! Good point. Many unintended consequences, as usual.
The gist of it is that the 5K does not count towards your tax bands. So for those of us who take divvies up to the higher tax bracket, we're better off. Will attempt sums in the morning.
A bit like the money you can get from renting a room then?
This is all speculative as we don't know for sure how this works, but assuming the £5k was a standalone allowance outside of the basic income band, then my back of a fag packet calculations show it would only allow you to take more money home overall before hitting the higher rate of tax, but this doesn't mean very much as your bottom line would still be worse off by about £500 versus taking the same amount now and paying higher rate tax:
New rules, avoiding higher rate tax:
£11k salary
£5k tax free dividend
£32k dividend * 0.925 = £29.6k
TOTAL: £45.6k take home, £2.4k tax, retained profit used up: £37k
Old rules, avoiding higher rate tax:
£11k salary
£32k gross dividend * 0.9 = £28.8k
TOTAL: £39.8k take home, £0 tax, retained profit used up: £28.8k
Old rules, same take home as first example:
£11k salary
£32k dividend at basic rate * 0.9 = £28.8k
£8.59k gross dividend at higher rate * 0.9 * 0.75 = £5.8k approx
TOTAL: £45.6k take home, £1.93k tax approx., retained profit used up = £36.5k
So just because you haven't gone into the higher rate under the new rules, you still aren't any better off. However, this is also the scenario where you don't take dividends up to the higher rate threshold, keeping your take home similar to current levels:
New rules, similar take home to current rules:
£11k salary
£5k tax free dividend,
£25.7k dividend * 0.925 = £23.8k
TOTAL: £39.8k take home, £1.9k tax, retained profit used up: £30.7k
And as you can see there, we're still nearly £2k worse off. Whatever way you cut this, you're going to be worse off next year but you shouldn't feel it in your take home, just your company retained profit figures.
Originally posted by TheCyclingProgrammerView Post
And as you can see there, we're still nearly £2k worse off. Whatever way you cut this, you're going to be worse off next year but you shouldn't feel it in your take home, just your company retained profit figures.
That was pretty much the conclusion that I came to, that the company will have less retained profits in the end, did you include the increase in tax free allowance?
Originally posted by TheCyclingProgrammerView Post
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Yes, there are so many different ways of cutting this. Depending on the salary/dividend mix, you can get down to <100 difference between regimes for a "typical" contractor scenario with low salary/high dividends. However, as you rightly say, we need to wait for the details. Eyes firmly fixed on the expenses and IR35 reviews, where the real news is likely to come.
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