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Sell my Computer to LTD company

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    #11
    Thanks for your replies.

    Thanks for your replies,

    One more small doubt. What about the VAT that I have paid for my laptop. Will I be able to claim it as a LTD company?. As a LTD company I cant claim it from myself as a individual person. I dont know its bit tricky to my mind.

    Me and my wife are using this laptop for complete business purpose because I already got one more computer for my home purpose.

    Thanks

    Comment


      #12
      Originally posted by Goodmans View Post
      Sorry is there something wrong with the Phrase "self-employed contractor" . Please correct me if I am wrong.

      Rgds,
      The term self employed can be confusing.

      Most folk on here running limited companies consider themselves Employees of their limited company. (although unless they have a contract of employment they are actaully "office holders")

      Self Employed contractors usually have no need for a limited company, but are rare because Agents will not usually deal with the self employed. Clients are usually reticent with dealing with the self employed in case they get hit for unpaid tax & NI.


      (there are some folk who are self employed and work as sole traders for their limited company, but this is too complicated to cover in this reply)

      HTH

      Comment


        #13
        Originally posted by Goodmans View Post
        Thanks for your replies,

        One more small doubt. What about the VAT that I have paid for my laptop. Will I be able to claim it as a LTD company?. As a LTD company I cant claim it from myself as a individual person. I dont know its bit tricky to my mind.

        Me and my wife are using this laptop for complete business purpose because I already got one more computer for my home purpose.

        Thanks
        You bought the Laptop for the company, so the VAT is claimable.
        The company is not buying it off you.

        You should probably register for Flat Rate Vat (unless you have lots of VAt inclusive purchases to make).

        basically you charge the client (or agent as appropriate) 17.5% of your fees in VAT, but you only give the taxman say 13% (12% in first year) ( if an IT provider, rates vary by sector) of the gross amount. Your company pockets this difference and you receive it after paying corp tax on it. You cannot however claim any VAT back (unless you make a capital purchase over £2,000, then you can claim the VAT back).

        An simple example:

        Your company charges for a week on £400 a day:

        Charge the Client or Agent £400 * 5 = £2000
        VAT on £2000 = £350
        Gross charged £2350

        Pay to VATman £2350 * 12% = £282

        Difference pocketed £68

        Multiplied by 46 weeks worked = £3128

        Not a bad return for doing very little (other than registering).

        HTH

        Comment


          #14
          Originally posted by Goodmans View Post
          Thanks for your replies,

          One more small doubt. What about the VAT that I have paid for my laptop. Will I be able to claim it as a LTD company?. As a LTD company I cant claim it from myself as a individual person. I dont know its bit tricky to my mind.

          Me and my wife are using this laptop for complete business purpose because I already got one more computer for my home purpose.

          Thanks
          You (personally) will not have charged YourCo VAT on the sale, so how can you recover it? You can reclaim the VAT only if the laptop was originally bought solely for company use. And strictly speaking, if you are selling YourCo an asset you bought personally you should take off the VAT from the price you paid originally, although that is another minor detail.

          But you're looking at £100 - why risk bending the rules for such a trivial amount?
          Blog? What blog...?

          Comment


            #15
            Thanks a lot guys. I am not bothered to claim the VAT on the computer that I am selling to my LTD company dont want to confuse Tax man.

            Yes. I am registered to VAT. I am an IT consultant. And my company is registered under IT category.

            Are you sure that it is 12% for the first year. I thought its 13% for every year.

            Regards,
            Goodmans

            Comment


              #16
              Not strictly relevant but you can also claim capital allowances on privately owned items used for business and do not have to transfer it. Do a search on HMRC website.
              bloggoth

              If everything isn't black and white, I say, 'Why the hell not?'
              John Wayne (My guru, not to be confused with my beloved prophet Jeremy Clarkson)

              Comment


                #17
                Originally posted by Sockpuppet View Post
                You'd have a hard time jusifying it if HMRC found it in the kids bedroom or it was a gaming PC. If you really mean "i want a second pc for m family and I want to get the VAT back" then the answer is no.
                And how would HMRC find this out? What a ridiculous comment.

                A second PC for a real business is hardly an issue, is it?

                Comment


                  #18
                  Originally posted by Goodmans View Post
                  One more small doubt. What about the VAT that I have paid for my laptop. Will I be able to claim it as a LTD company?. As a LTD company I cant claim it from myself as a individual person. I dont know its bit tricky to my mind.

                  Me and my wife are using this laptop for complete business purpose because I already got one more computer for my home purpose.
                  Essentially, the company purchased the laptop but you paid for it. The company reimburses you what you paid, then reclaims the VAT. No problem at all. This is how a real business works.

                  Comment


                    #19
                    Originally posted by Platypus View Post
                    Essentially, the company purchased the laptop but you paid for it. The company reimburses you what you paid, then reclaims the VAT. No problem at all. This is how a real business works.
                    Wrong, strictly speaking. As I said earlier, this is only true if you bought the laptop purely for the business in advance of setting up the business: effectively the transaction is then an expense claim. Nothing wrong with that of course, and Hector would have a really fun time proving a recently acquired laptop was not bought on that basis - one that's two years old though...

                    Otherwise you are simply selling something you own already to a limited company and unless you are registered for VAT yourself, there is no VAT in the sale, hence nothing to reclaim.
                    Blog? What blog...?

                    Comment


                      #20
                      Originally posted by malvolio View Post
                      Wrong, strictly speaking. As I said earlier, this is only true if you bought the laptop purely for the business in advance of setting up the business: effectively the transaction is then an expense claim. Nothing wrong with that of course, and Hector would have a really fun time proving a recently acquired laptop was not bought on that basis - one that's two years old though...

                      Otherwise you are simply selling something you own already to a limited company and unless you are registered for VAT yourself, there is no VAT in the sale, hence nothing to reclaim.
                      Yes I agree that a laptop bought more than a few months beforehand would be a problem. You are quite correct.

                      Comment

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