Evening all. Looking for input on this from the good learned folks of the forum, any advice/thoughts appreciated.
I'm a permanent employee, several years since I last contracted, but have been approached about some advisory/consulting work for another company. Issues with my employment contract aside, I'm trying to figure out the best way to go about this. Part of the answer I'm sure will involve engaging an accountant, but I'm not sure if one of the £75 a month online jobbies is the best place to go, nor if they will be able to answer some of my questions.
Some facts;
My questions
Again, thanks in advance for input.
I'm a permanent employee, several years since I last contracted, but have been approached about some advisory/consulting work for another company. Issues with my employment contract aside, I'm trying to figure out the best way to go about this. Part of the answer I'm sure will involve engaging an accountant, but I'm not sure if one of the £75 a month online jobbies is the best place to go, nor if they will be able to answer some of my questions.
Some facts;
- Salary plus bonuses this tax year in permie gig approx £150k (relevant from a tax bracket perspective)
- Consulting gig worth approx £30k over the next 9-12 months
- Nature of the work will be advisory - on IT strategy development, building an in-house IT capability (currently outsourced), bringing in some sector specific software solutions etc
- I won't be on site, using their equipment, under their direction (quite the opposite) etc.
My questions
- Most tax efficient way to go about this, assuming I don't want to put it all into pension? I'm thinking Ltd co with myself and my wife as equal shareholders, all paid out in dividends after corp tax (wife earns approx £20k pa currently)
- Do I need to pay myself a salary at all? Obviously I have no personal tax allowance so this would seem silly unless a requirement.
- Anything else to consider such as deferring portion of the dividend until next tax year? Would this open up another £4k tax free, and also my income may be lower next year so I wouldn't pay the highest rate of tax on the divvy.
- Considering the gig/company will only last ~12 months, is entrepreneurs relief something I can take advantage of?
- Do I need a contract? I would be happy enough simply invoicing as appropriate. Not sure whether it's desirable or not to have a contract from an IR35 perspective. Intention is roughly £5k per month of invoices for the first 3 months or so, tapering off after that
- How necessary are things like PI/PL insurance?
Again, thanks in advance for input.
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