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Ir35 calculator to know when its not worth it to work

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    #51
    Weird. You earn £50 more an hour of which you get £25 in your sweaty little hands. But apparently that makes you £25 worse off, rather than £25 better off. I pity those CEOs on £500K.
    Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!

    Comment


      #52
      Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
      Weird. You earn £50 more an hour of which you get £25 in your sweaty little hands. But apparently that makes you £25 worse off, rather than £25 better off. I pity those CEOs on £500K.
      If maths isn’t your strong point, imagine there are just two people, you and Bob and one bottle of wine. You earn £100 and Bob gets £100. The wine costs £100 a bottle. Everything is equal.

      Now you decide to work harder. So you get an extra £100 wages, of which £60 goes to Bob, you get to keep £40. The price of wine goes up to £150 a bottle.

      You think you are better off because you now earn £140, but in fact you are worse off. You can no longer afford the wine, but Bob can.

      Comment


        #53
        Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
        Weird. You earn £50 more an hour of which you get £25 in your sweaty little hands. But apparently that makes you £25 worse off, rather than £25 better off. I pity those CEOs on £500K.
        Why do you compare against CEO wage at £500k? Of course if I earn such amount I wouldn't mind paying 50-60% tax rate.


        Would you work at 45% tax rate if you were on £200/day? You would end up with half of it. That's what you'd get working for deliveroo or any low pay job actually.

        Time is money. As simple as that. There is a point where it's not worth it unless the wage is very high.

        And yes of course I wouldn't mind paying 50-60% tax if I could charge £1k/day. But that's not what this is about here

        Comment


          #54
          Originally posted by cwah View Post

          Why do you compare against CEO wage at £500k? Of course if I earn such amount I wouldn't mind paying 50-60% tax rate.


          Would you work at 45% tax rate if you were on £200/day? You would end up with half of it. That's what you'd get working for deliveroo or any low pay job actually.

          Time is money. As simple as that. There is a point where it's not worth it unless the wage is very high.

          And yes of course I wouldn't mind paying 50-60% tax if I could charge £1k/day. But that's not what this is about here
          I don't understand why you're not getting this.
          If you earn £200 a day and assume 240 days chargeable. That's £48k a year. That's taxable at 25%.
          The marginal tax rate is higher than that, and that varies even more than your (very) loose calculations.
          Your marginal tax rate will only exceed 45% if you have children and earn between £50k and £60k, or if you earn £100k to £120k, or over £150k.

          As for not caring when you earn over £1k a day.... you're making no sense.

          See You Next Tuesday

          Comment


            #55
            Originally posted by Lance View Post

            I don't understand why you're not getting this.
            If you earn £200 a day and assume 240 days chargeable. That's £48k a year. That's taxable at 25%.
            The marginal tax rate is higher than that, and that varies even more than your (very) loose calculations.
            Your marginal tax rate will only exceed 45% if you have children and earn between £50k and £60k, or if you earn £100k to £120k, or over £150k.

            As for not caring when you earn over £1k a day.... you're making no sense.

            If you looked at my table, you'll realise that the chart you are showing is incomplete because it doesn't include the employer national insurance that's at an whooping 13.8% + apprenticeship levy.

            So on £48k a year, the total averaged tax is 32.5%. But really, all it's doing is to average up the initial personal allowance (taxed at 6% until £12,571) then any additional income is taxed at 42% (+ umbrella fees).

            You can always average up to make you feel your total tax rate is lower, but the reality is that any income past £12,571 will be cut by almost half.

            Comment


              #56
              Originally posted by cwah View Post

              If you looked at my table, you'll realise that the chart you are showing is incomplete because it doesn't include the employer national insurance that's at an whooping 13.8% + apprenticeship levy.

              So on £48k a year, the total averaged tax is 32.5%. But really, all it's doing is to average up the initial personal allowance (taxed at 6% until £12,571) then any additional income is taxed at 42% (+ umbrella fees).

              You can always average up to make you feel your total tax rate is lower, but the reality is that any income past £12,571 will be cut by almost half.
              as stated earlier I can't be bothered to work out eNICS and apprenticeship levy.

              All I can say is welcome to the real world. Whether you work for an umbrella or a proper employee those costs are part of the cost of employing you. You might not see it but it's there all the same.

              Wait till you hear about VAT..... 20% on everything you buy.
              Using your mathematical method that means your tax rate is actually 65%
              See You Next Tuesday

              Comment


                #57
                Originally posted by Lance View Post

                Wait till you hear about VAT..... 20% on everything you buy.
                Using your mathematical method that means your tax rate is actually 65%
                Um, not sure why you’re smiling about, or what mathematical method you use. VAT is more than that and your tax rate is actually more than 65%.

                Comment


                  #58
                  Originally posted by hugebrain View Post
                  imagine there are just two people, you and Bob and one bottle of wine. You earn £100 and Bob gets £100. The wine costs £100 a bottle. Everything is equal.

                  Now you decide to work harder. So you get an extra £100 wages, of which £60 goes to Bob, you get to keep £40. The price of wine goes up to £150 a bottle.

                  You think you are better off because you now earn £140, but in fact you are worse off. You can no longer afford the wine, but Bob can.
                  Thank you for an unrealistic, contrived and pathalogical example. Back in the real world, the redistribution goes to Bobs 1-100. They each get 30p more (the other £30 pays for roads, civil servant salaries etc.). They have £100.30 and you have £140. You're better off. And none of you can afford the wine.

                  There are some rare cases in real life where it works out that you are in fact worse off if you earn a bit more. But they're rare and tend to be caused by boundary conditions. Once you're away from there, more income == more income. Even with redistribution.

                  Originally posted by cwah View Post

                  Why do you compare against CEO wage at £500k? Of course if I earn such amount I wouldn't mind paying 50-60% tax rate.


                  Would you work at 45% tax rate if you were on £200/day?
                  I wouldn't be on £200 a day. I'd be on £800. £600 for one contract £200 for the other. And I'm still better off than you by £110. The whole "it's so unfair" relies on contrived examples and only looking at the marginal rate. We live in a progressive taxation regime - this is what you get. What the government could do which would stop the hard-of-thinking whining, is publish tax rates as a percentage of total income.

                  If on a daily rate, £100 were tax free, the next £500 at 25% and everything above that 50%, you end up with:
                  Daily Rate % Take home
                  100 0% 100
                  200 13% 175
                  300 17% 250
                  400 19% 325
                  500 20% 400
                  600 21% 475
                  700 25% 525
                  800 28% 575
                  900 31% 625
                  1000 33% 675
                  1100 34% 725
                  1200 35% 775
                  Oh no, I'm earning 800, he's earning 600. I pay 7% more tax than him. How terribly unfair...


                  Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!

                  Comment


                    #59
                    Originally posted by hugebrain View Post

                    Um, not sure why you’re smiling about, or what mathematical method you use. VAT is more than that and your tax rate is actually more than 65%.


                    See You Next Tuesday

                    Comment


                      #60
                      Originally posted by Lance View Post


                      VAT at 20% is what you pay from your post-tax income so the effective rate is higher

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