• Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
  • Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!

Ir35

Collapse
X
  •  
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #11
    I am paying a lot of money for piece of mind but piece of mind it is.

    I reckon it's costing me in the region of £5k a year to sleep easier. Although saying that do have less to do and think about as well than if I ran my own limited company but put it down to me just being a scaredy cat! Others don't fully appreciate what would be involved if caught and others will blindly go on.

    I cannot see the government having outlawed MSCs now won't then go to see what more they can crack down on, I guess as time goes on the more likely it *might* be you get caught.

    Trouble is in contracting many companies take them on because they know a project or a job has a short life span and don't want an FTE on the books they have to re-house somewhere else in the near future. IR35 should operate as a direct deterrant for people leaving a company as a permie and starting contracting the next day as a tax evasion for the employee and NI evasion for the company. Not the people that are employed genuinely as a short term stop gap or as project people etc.

    :-( maybe I should do some reading into it and see if I can handle running my own limited company.

    One last question I saw a company called 1stcontact that say they are running legit, yet despite you being the director it would seem payrol etc is handled by them. PSC??

    Comment


      #12
      The money you pay for insurance is to cover the cost of representation for an investigation not the cost of any subsequent bill.


      You could be outside, but if investigated and found outside you'd still have some costs incurred which is what the insurance covers.

      If you are inside, the insurnace costs will again cover your represnetation but not you're tax bill - you'd still have to pay that.

      1stcontact looks like MSC [ to me anyway ] which means they're employee's / clients / contractors should pay 100% PAYE
      Cenedl heb iaith, cenedl heb galon

      Comment


        #13
        Ah ok so the tax bill you'd have to save for as it were and pay if found inside....makes sense I suppose, I'd just be wary of ever spending it LOL! Guess in a high interest account it's not so bad. I like someone elses idea of the offset mortgage and using it for that :-)

        1stcontact looked exactly that way to me yet they say they are legit and one person here I know uses them. I would have thought this was a lot more risky than employing your own acocuntant and runnig it yourself.

        Comment


          #14
          Originally posted by Damo1176
          I am paying a lot of money for piece of mind but piece of mind it is. I reckon it's costing me in the region of £5k a year to sleep easier.
          You release you could get full IR35 insurance which covers you for all tax you might have to pay, interest and penalties for around 300 quid. Or insurance that covers all your legal fees which would almost guarantee an IR35 win for 100 quid (see QDOS, PCG, Accountax etc..)

          Why pay £5,000 per year when you could sleep easy for £300?!

          Comment


            #15
            I did not realise there was insurance that could cover all tax, bills and cover for a start. Also I guess I just wanted an easy life away from running my own company but it seems the only way to make a lot of money in contracting is to do so.

            Comment


              #16
              Originally posted by Damo1176
              I did not realise there was insurance that could cover all tax, bills and cover for a start. Also I guess I just wanted an easy life away from running my own company but it seems the only way to make a lot of money in contracting is to do so.
              Sorry only scanned thread, didn't realise you were not running your own company. But anywhow, now you know there is insurance out there.

              Comment


                #17
                This IR35 thing bugs the hell out of me, How the hell did this ludicrous ruling ever come into place. Oh I forget, New fecking labour

                Fact is if you're contracting. You're not a disguised employee. You get no sick pay, no paid holidays, no job security and fewer employee protections than your permie counterparts and as such should not be paying full wack contributions. That's before you've even counted the costs and hassle of running your own business.

                If you're a one man band then they could at least make the system fairer by expecting you to pay the normal PAYE and NI but cut out the employers NI which if you're a limited company you should by no means be paying IMO.
                Last edited by pisces; 15 June 2007, 04:27.

                Comment


                  #18
                  Originally posted by pisces
                  If you're a one man band then they could at least make the system fairer by expecting you to pay the normal PAYE and NI but cut out the employers NI which if you're a limited company you should by no means
                  be paying IMO.
                  Somebody has to pay the employer's NI. If you're suggesting the client does, then they'll just reduce your rate by 12.9%, and it'll make no difference. Thinking that employer's NI doesn't affect you because it's the employer that pays it is permie thinking.

                  But yes it is beyond insanity that there's no answer to the question of how much tax you should pay without it having to boil down to a judge's opinion. Imagine if there was the same situation with regular employees, all 20 odd million of them.
                  Will work inside IR35. Or for food.

                  Comment


                    #19
                    Originally posted by pisces
                    Fact is if you're contracting. You're not a disguised employee. You get no sick pay, no paid holidays, no job security and fewer employee protections than your permie counterparts and as such should not be paying full wack contributions.
                    I'm not trying to defend IR35 - but you do get those benefits. you just get them in a different way (rolled up in the rate) and have to manage them youselves.

                    If you look at, say, a 50k a year position the actual cost to the employer is probably something like:-

                    50k salary
                    6k er's NI
                    5k pension
                    5k bonus
                    6k car

                    total 71k. Given the norm of 25 days holiday, 9 days bank holiday, 5 days sick this buys 221 days. Effectively £320 per day = 43 ph.

                    A commensurate contract postions would probably be paying around 50 p/hour. Our the same cost plus a 20% premium. This representing a risk premium for the contractor and flexibility fee for the engager.

                    Comment

                    Working...
                    X