Thanks Both...
"I presume you mean expenses that the client reimburses you for? Your company invoices for these, they are paid to your company and you then claim from your company"
No I don't get any expenses from the client.
I get travel & subsitance - which I [ as an employee pay for and then my company reimburses me for ]
I also buy stuffl which my company pays for.
Which of these two ways works out better - if I buy say a book should I buy as an employee and get my company to pay me back or just pay straight out of the company bank account ?
With the shares thing it's already done, so I can'y change it.
The bit about Artic I looked as was as follows :
"The Joneses brought their case to an HMRC tribunal last year and lost and had their appeal to the High Court also rejected in April of this year. Both ruled that income from a non- or low-earning spouse who co-owns a business should be taxed at the same rate as the main earner."
Both myslef and my wife are taxed at the same LOW rate - so would the ruling not apply even if HMRC won ?
"I presume you mean expenses that the client reimburses you for? Your company invoices for these, they are paid to your company and you then claim from your company"
No I don't get any expenses from the client.
I get travel & subsitance - which I [ as an employee pay for and then my company reimburses me for ]
I also buy stuffl which my company pays for.
Which of these two ways works out better - if I buy say a book should I buy as an employee and get my company to pay me back or just pay straight out of the company bank account ?
With the shares thing it's already done, so I can'y change it.
The bit about Artic I looked as was as follows :
"The Joneses brought their case to an HMRC tribunal last year and lost and had their appeal to the High Court also rejected in April of this year. Both ruled that income from a non- or low-earning spouse who co-owns a business should be taxed at the same rate as the main earner."
Both myslef and my wife are taxed at the same LOW rate - so would the ruling not apply even if HMRC won ?


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