I'll be going permie at the start of the new tax year (for the foreseeable future, though hopefully not forever), and I'm planning on buying a house (my first) this year at some point too. I have approx 50k in the business bank account which I don't need for the deposit.
I'm quite nervious about taking on a large mortgage and associated risks, so I'm thinking to mitigate this maybe I could leave this cash in the company account when I go permie, and treat it as a "guaranteed income" safety net in case I find myself out of work. With that cash I could pay myself a salary for two years or so and keep paying the mortgage while looking for contract work.
The more likely scenario I think would be that the cash just sits there for the next two or three years while I work permie.
I realise I could close the business and claim entrepreneurs relief but not only would I end up paying 10% tax that way, the cash would end up either burning a hole in my pocket or locked up in an investment, neither one of which is preferable to having a guaranteed income for two years.
So is this a sensible idea or am I overlooking something important, or does anyone have a better idea? I'm aware that I couldn't lock all the cash away in bonds etc without becoming classed as a closed investment company so I wouldn't do that; I'm prepared to take a (smallish!) hit from the cash value being eroded by inflation.
Thanks
I'm quite nervious about taking on a large mortgage and associated risks, so I'm thinking to mitigate this maybe I could leave this cash in the company account when I go permie, and treat it as a "guaranteed income" safety net in case I find myself out of work. With that cash I could pay myself a salary for two years or so and keep paying the mortgage while looking for contract work.
The more likely scenario I think would be that the cash just sits there for the next two or three years while I work permie.
I realise I could close the business and claim entrepreneurs relief but not only would I end up paying 10% tax that way, the cash would end up either burning a hole in my pocket or locked up in an investment, neither one of which is preferable to having a guaranteed income for two years.
So is this a sensible idea or am I overlooking something important, or does anyone have a better idea? I'm aware that I couldn't lock all the cash away in bonds etc without becoming classed as a closed investment company so I wouldn't do that; I'm prepared to take a (smallish!) hit from the cash value being eroded by inflation.
Thanks
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