Hi,
For simplicity...
£100k turnover
£10 salary to director
£5 business purchases
£85 profit
£68,000 left after corporation tax.
Imagine the director taking that £68,000 as a dividend.
They'd pay dividend tax and the usual tax on it via self assessment.
They also pay a NIC based on their minimum wage.
---
Now imagine they were found to be inside IR35 for that period. My understanding is they would say the person in employment would have a salary, and that would be tax'd. I believe the salary would be £68,000 - 5% business running costs or prehaps £85,000 - 5% business running costs.
Then the person would be tax'd...
But given that this individual has already paid tax via self assessment, given the money when in the business bank was already had 20% tax applied to it. How is the bill calculated? Do they work out the two figures and take one from the other?
Is it therefore not that much of a big deal if the contractor isn't leaving money in the business bank but taking most of the money as dividends leaving just enough to cover VAT returns and the like?
For simplicity...
£100k turnover
£10 salary to director
£5 business purchases
£85 profit
£68,000 left after corporation tax.
Imagine the director taking that £68,000 as a dividend.
They'd pay dividend tax and the usual tax on it via self assessment.
They also pay a NIC based on their minimum wage.
---
Now imagine they were found to be inside IR35 for that period. My understanding is they would say the person in employment would have a salary, and that would be tax'd. I believe the salary would be £68,000 - 5% business running costs or prehaps £85,000 - 5% business running costs.
Then the person would be tax'd...
But given that this individual has already paid tax via self assessment, given the money when in the business bank was already had 20% tax applied to it. How is the bill calculated? Do they work out the two figures and take one from the other?
Is it therefore not that much of a big deal if the contractor isn't leaving money in the business bank but taking most of the money as dividends leaving just enough to cover VAT returns and the like?
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