Originally posted by jamesbrown
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My take of this text is that it does exempt overseas companies. But as you say, this text is worthless, what matters is legislation.
Just to waste our time further on this worthless text, the Simplified Test is a subheading under Who the Rules Apply To, as evidenced both by the links at the top of the page and the size of the font. Therefore, saying "You must apply the rules if you have an annual turnover of £10.2M and are not: ... an overseas company" clearly suggests that overseas companies do not have to apply the rules.
It does not say, "Overseas companies fall under the small companies regime" or "overseas companies fall under the large/medium companies regime," it says you don't have to apply the rules. The simplified test is not a simplified test of small/big, it is a simplified test of who has to apply the rules.
If this were in the legislation, I would say overseas companies are exempt.
The draft legislation does not say that, though. It says overseas companies are liable (if they are large/medium). Therefore, if it passes without change, overseas clients will be liable, even though that liability will be completely unenforceable.
I would read it as this document indicates HMRC's intent that the rules should not apply to overseas clients, and that rather those contractors with overseas clients will be liable for proper handling of IR35, as they always have been. If that's the case, I'd expect the legislation to be amended in the near future, perhaps before implementation, to reflect that.
It's probably not important because those of us with foreign clients aren't going to be inside IR35, 99% of the time.
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