I have a limited company from which I have not taken out much in the way of dividends so the company account has a balance of roughly £35K after satisfying all tax liabilities. I have read of a mechanism whereby I sell my share (the one and only share) for 90p on the pound to a specialist company engaged in this practice and I then treat the proceeds as a capital gain subject to entrepreneur's relief. The alleged advantage over member's voluntary liquidation is that I could start a new limited company in the same field without falling afoul of anti-phoenixing rules because I have sold the company rather than having liquidated it. The specialist company does the admin for 10% of my company's retained profit.
Clever or too good to be true? I'm not currently trading at the moment so the idea of freeing up my profit (albeit in a slightly more expensive fashion than MVL) is of interest because I can go back into my chosen field if another opportunity arises. But if I take a step back it does look like a anti-phoenixing rule avoidance mechanism which might be a red flag to HMRC?
Clever or too good to be true? I'm not currently trading at the moment so the idea of freeing up my profit (albeit in a slightly more expensive fashion than MVL) is of interest because I can go back into my chosen field if another opportunity arises. But if I take a step back it does look like a anti-phoenixing rule avoidance mechanism which might be a red flag to HMRC?
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