I have just opened a SIPP account. My accountant had previously said that my company can make not only the max £40k contribution to my pension this tax year, but also a £40k contribution for each of the previous three tax years, making the total contribution a massive £160k.
That got me all fired up, so I set up the SIPP and just asked him one last time if it’s OK if I now transferred the £160k to the SIPP account.
Background info:
The accountant has now made an about turn and said this (I paraphrase):
In addition, he is urging me to see an IFA:
Is he right, or do I need a new accountant? If it’s the latter, please can anyone suggest a competent accountant who is used to dealing with these kind of arrangements?
It's possible that he didn't realise that the £160k is coming from my retained earnings, not from current year's profits. I have clarified that and he hasn't come back yet, but is his general position right about low salary and high pension?
That got me all fired up, so I set up the SIPP and just asked him one last time if it’s OK if I now transferred the £160k to the SIPP account.
Background info:
- All of the £160k would come from my retained profits, not from the trading profits this year.
- I take a small salary (c£8k pa) and a larger dividend (c£30k).
- The company turnover is c£100k.
The accountant has now made an about turn and said this (I paraphrase):
For the company to get tax relief against its profits any cost it makes has to be wholly and exclusively for business purposes. It’s normal for companies to pay pension contributions to their Directors. However it is not normal for a company which is paying a salary of £8K to a Director to then pay £160K as a pension contribution.
HMRC may see that as excessive and driven by the desire to avoid corp. tax. Pension contributions should be paid to Directors as part of their remuneration package. Clearly as things stand you are underpaid for the work you do. I would suggest commercially the work you do is worth more like £90K given the company’s turnover of around £100K per year, so it could be argued that if the salary and the pension contribution combined were at that sort of level it commercially stacks up and so at least half of the £160K payment would be fine for corporation tax relief. Whether HMRC would allow the rest of the £160K payment for corporation tax relief is debatable.
No-one will stop the contributions from going into your SIPP scheme as they are within the maximum range.
HMRC may see that as excessive and driven by the desire to avoid corp. tax. Pension contributions should be paid to Directors as part of their remuneration package. Clearly as things stand you are underpaid for the work you do. I would suggest commercially the work you do is worth more like £90K given the company’s turnover of around £100K per year, so it could be argued that if the salary and the pension contribution combined were at that sort of level it commercially stacks up and so at least half of the £160K payment would be fine for corporation tax relief. Whether HMRC would allow the rest of the £160K payment for corporation tax relief is debatable.
No-one will stop the contributions from going into your SIPP scheme as they are within the maximum range.
I suggest you use an IFA to do this with you. They would have a view on how a payment of this level will be viewed by HMRC too as they come across it in practice more than I do.
It's possible that he didn't realise that the £160k is coming from my retained earnings, not from current year's profits. I have clarified that and he hasn't come back yet, but is his general position right about low salary and high pension?
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