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How is loss in one financial year carried forward into next

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    How is loss in one financial year carried forward into next

    I haven't asked my accountant yet. Asking here first. This is very simple example.

    Say in this FY my LTD pays me salary of £11k, but there is no work and my turnover is £5k.
    At the year end I will be declaring a loss of £6k. Also the LTD will owe me salary money.
    No corp tax due.

    Next FY I got a good turnover of say, £17k. Still £11k salary.
    How will the £6k loss be treated in respect to profit?

    1. £17k - £11k - £6k loss/debt = no profit
    2. £17 - £11k = £6k profit @20% corp tax

    #2
    Originally posted by kolata View Post
    I haven't asked my accountant yet. Asking here first. This is very simple example.

    Say in this FY my LTD pays me salary of £11k, but there is no work and my turnover is £5k.
    At the year end I will be declaring a loss of £6k. Also the LTD will owe me salary money.
    No corp tax due.

    Next FY I got a good turnover of say, £17k. Still £11k salary.
    How will the £6k loss be treated in respect to profit?

    1. £17k - £11k - £6k loss/debt = no profit
    2. £17 - £11k = £6k profit @20% corp tax
    Why ask non-accountants then?
    The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't exist

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by kolata View Post
      I haven't asked my accountant yet. Asking here first. This is very simple example.

      Say in this FY my LTD pays me salary of £11k, but there is no work and my turnover is £5k.
      At the year end I will be declaring a loss of £6k. Also the LTD will owe me salary money.
      No corp tax due.

      Next FY I got a good turnover of say, £17k. Still £11k salary.
      How will the £6k loss be treated in respect to profit?

      1. £17k - £11k - £6k loss/debt = no profit
      2. £17 - £11k = £6k profit @20% corp tax
      Yes.
      'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by LondonManc View Post
        Why ask non-accountants then?
        Not everyone on here is a non-accountant LM.
        "I can put any old tat in my sig, put quotes around it and attribute to someone of whom I've heard, to make it sound true."
        - Voltaire/Benjamin Franklin/Anne Frank...

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by cojak View Post
          Not everyone on here is a non-accountant LM.
          Indeed but the advice will be worth every penny the OP paid for it.........
          'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by cojak View Post
            Not everyone on here is a non-accountant LM.
            Fair enough. Google might be quicker though
            The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't exist

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by kolata View Post
              I haven't asked my accountant yet. Asking here first. This is very simple example.

              Say in this FY my LTD pays me salary of £11k, but there is no work and my turnover is £5k.
              At the year end I will be declaring a loss of £6k. Also the LTD will owe me salary money.
              No corp tax due.

              Next FY I got a good turnover of say, £17k. Still £11k salary.
              How will the £6k loss be treated in respect to profit?

              1. £17k - £11k - £6k loss/debt = no profit
              2. £17 - £11k = £6k profit @20% corp tax
              You can use the loss from a previous year to offset the profit of the next year. So you can carry it over. Alternatively, you can use a loss this year to reclaim the corporation tax paid on last year's profitable year.

              Edit - also, if your company "owes" you salary, but did not pay it, then the best thing to do is to credit that salary against the director's loan account IMO. That way the salary still gets "paid", but you pay it into your loan account rather than handing over actual cash.
              Last edited by GillsMan; 22 September 2016, 09:56. Reason: thought of an extra point.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by kolata View Post
                1. £17k - £11k - £6k loss/debt = no profit
                All other things being equal, your example 1 is correct.

                Comment


                  #9
                  BTW when you do the CT online it says "would you like to carry forward losses from a previous period", and you say yes and enter the number. Couldn't be simpler.
                  Will work inside IR35. Or for food.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by LondonManc View Post
                    Why ask non-accountants then?
                    Forum: Accounting / Legal
                    Financial and legal issues affecting IT contractor companies, including IR35.

                    Comment

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