Originally posted by jorgelorenzo
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IR35: Planning for April 2021 – should I stay or should I go?
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Know a few contractors who were burned by following advice of this thread treated as gospel before anything concrete was announced, so glad I stayed in my contract till end of March. Shame some fellow contractors losing out on a month or so invoices.
Moral is don't listen to the clueless posters here who clearly have an agenda. Get en extension before April as long as possible.Comment
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Originally posted by Unix View Postbefore anything concrete was announced
There is still nothing "concrete".
Where is the final legislation?
I expect this thread has saved a lot of people from some very stupid decisions too.Comment
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IR35: Planning for April 2020 – should I stay or should I go?
Originally posted by Unix View PostKnow a few contractors who were burned by following advice of this thread treated as gospel before anything concrete was announced, so glad I stayed in my contract till end of March. Shame some fellow contractors losing out on a month or so invoices.
Moral is don't listen to the clueless posters here who clearly have an agenda. Get en extension before April as long as possible.
HMRC moved the goal posts only last week.
Those contractors are obviously more risk averse than you are."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
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Originally posted by Unix View PostKnow a few contractors who were burned by following advice of this thread treated as gospel before anything concrete was announced, so glad I stayed in my contract till end of March. Shame some fellow contractors losing out on a month or so invoices.
Moral is don't listen to the clueless posters here who clearly have an agenda. Get en extension before April as long as possible.Last edited by dx4100; 11 February 2020, 15:05.Comment
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Originally posted by Unix View PostKnow a few contractors who were burned by following advice of this thread treated as gospel before anything concrete was announced, so glad I stayed in my contract till end of March. Shame some fellow contractors losing out on a month or so invoices.
Moral is don't listen to the clueless posters here who clearly have an agenda. Get en extension before April as long as possible.
Do what now?
How is this going to help anyone?
Stop being lazy and reading lazy journalism. Make sure YOU understand the changes coming first, before spouting off such crap advice.Comment
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Originally posted by ChimpMaster View Post"Get en extension before April as long as possible."
Do what now?
How is this going to help anyone?
Stop being lazy and reading lazy journalism. Make sure YOU understand the changes coming first, before spouting off such crap advice.merely at clientco for the entertainmentComment
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Originally posted by ChimpMaster View Post"Get en extension before April as long as possible."
Do what now?
How is this going to help anyone?
Stop being lazy and reading lazy journalism. Make sure YOU understand the changes coming first, before spouting off such crap advice.Comment
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I will have been in my current contract for 15 months by the end of March. I have calculated that the potential tax bill, if I am collared for IR35 for this period, would be roughly £1000 per month.
Therefore, if I continue with the client and roll into an inside IR35 arrangement from April, my risk is around £15k of back-tax.
I am willing to take this risk. Is there anything else I should be considering?
Thanks for any input.Comment
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Originally posted by dx4100 View PostMore fool them to be frank. The limitations of what was being said was clear. All comes down to how much risk someone wanted to personally take and responsibility for their own choices.Comment
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