My ltd co was only formed in January but now I'm taking a perm role so it's unlikely it will trade further.
It has about £91K from which corp tax will/could need to be deducted. I've not taken any salary from it and in the 24/25 tax year I received a salary from an umbrella into the 45% bracket.
Option 1
Pay it into pension over 2 years (I maxed it out in prior years) and somehow claim a refund for the CT in year two as the Ltd will have made a loss.
Of note, the marginal tax rate on my perm salary is 40% this year and fair chunk will be 45% next year (plus the NI) that I would be able to avoid by having my new employer pay into my pension via salary sacrifice instead of using the allowance to avoid CT and dividend tax. Also, when I withdraw my pension I intend to keep in the 20% tax bracket - so an effective 15% tax rate taking into consideration the 25% tax free allowed from pension.
I wonder if I can pay it into pension in about 7 years time when I've stopped working - that would hands down be the most tax efficient way!!!!! EDIT - no you can't - you can only get a refund for CT paid up to a max of 3 years prior.
Option 2
Pay (almost) 25% CT on it, leaving about £69k and then take as dividends over 2 years taxed at 8.75% in about 7 years time when I plan to retire. So an effective rate of 31% which is more than the 25% to 30% (ie. marginal rate minus the tax I'd pay when taking the pension) + NI rate I'd be paying on my new permie job salary if I used my pension allowance against the Ltd's funds.
As Malvolio points out below - it may not be 8.75% when I come to draw the dividend though!
Option 3
Something better
What would you do please?
It has about £91K from which corp tax will/could need to be deducted. I've not taken any salary from it and in the 24/25 tax year I received a salary from an umbrella into the 45% bracket.
Option 1
Pay it into pension over 2 years (I maxed it out in prior years) and somehow claim a refund for the CT in year two as the Ltd will have made a loss.
Of note, the marginal tax rate on my perm salary is 40% this year and fair chunk will be 45% next year (plus the NI) that I would be able to avoid by having my new employer pay into my pension via salary sacrifice instead of using the allowance to avoid CT and dividend tax. Also, when I withdraw my pension I intend to keep in the 20% tax bracket - so an effective 15% tax rate taking into consideration the 25% tax free allowed from pension.
I wonder if I can pay it into pension in about 7 years time when I've stopped working - that would hands down be the most tax efficient way!!!!! EDIT - no you can't - you can only get a refund for CT paid up to a max of 3 years prior.
Option 2
Pay (almost) 25% CT on it, leaving about £69k and then take as dividends over 2 years taxed at 8.75% in about 7 years time when I plan to retire. So an effective rate of 31% which is more than the 25% to 30% (ie. marginal rate minus the tax I'd pay when taking the pension) + NI rate I'd be paying on my new permie job salary if I used my pension allowance against the Ltd's funds.
As Malvolio points out below - it may not be 8.75% when I come to draw the dividend though!
Option 3
Something better
What would you do please?
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