Hi all,
New guy here. Please don't kick the newbie too hard. I haven't been contracting for too long (around three years) and I work in electronics and embedded software. I use a Limited company and use Brookson for accountancy.
Now I've always understood that the result of 'claiming back expenses' is that you pay Corporation Tax on the profit that is the total income minus expenses. So in simple terms, 'claiming back your expenses' really means that, by the time you've taken your salary and all dividends for a given period, you in effect recover just a fifth of the expenses you have had to pay out of your pocket. Or, if I were to stay in a £30 B&B for five nights in a row, then what's in my pocket has been dented by £120.
Yet on numerous occasions I've spoken with contractors - some of them complete newbies, some of them long established - who insist everything's paid back to them.
Is this just a common stupid misconception? Or, am I missing something, despite how the FAQs on both the Brookson website and on this very website demonstrate quite clearly that claiming expenses just provides Corporation tax relief? I feel stupid having to ask this here, but when you've had to argue until you're blue in the face with some other guy who's insisting black is white, you can start to doubt yourself.
Furthermore, a guy with whom I was having such an argument very recently was also insisting that he had 'no Corporation tax to pay this year whatsoever' as a result of claiming expenses. Uhm...
On another note, why do some contractors have to 'talk big' and 'big themselves up', consistently refer to themselves as "We" rather than "I" during all conversation with you, just because they've got their spouse named as a shareholder?
I'll wind my neck in now.
Cheers,
Trev
New guy here. Please don't kick the newbie too hard. I haven't been contracting for too long (around three years) and I work in electronics and embedded software. I use a Limited company and use Brookson for accountancy.
Now I've always understood that the result of 'claiming back expenses' is that you pay Corporation Tax on the profit that is the total income minus expenses. So in simple terms, 'claiming back your expenses' really means that, by the time you've taken your salary and all dividends for a given period, you in effect recover just a fifth of the expenses you have had to pay out of your pocket. Or, if I were to stay in a £30 B&B for five nights in a row, then what's in my pocket has been dented by £120.
Yet on numerous occasions I've spoken with contractors - some of them complete newbies, some of them long established - who insist everything's paid back to them.
Is this just a common stupid misconception? Or, am I missing something, despite how the FAQs on both the Brookson website and on this very website demonstrate quite clearly that claiming expenses just provides Corporation tax relief? I feel stupid having to ask this here, but when you've had to argue until you're blue in the face with some other guy who's insisting black is white, you can start to doubt yourself.
Furthermore, a guy with whom I was having such an argument very recently was also insisting that he had 'no Corporation tax to pay this year whatsoever' as a result of claiming expenses. Uhm...
On another note, why do some contractors have to 'talk big' and 'big themselves up', consistently refer to themselves as "We" rather than "I" during all conversation with you, just because they've got their spouse named as a shareholder?
I'll wind my neck in now.
Cheers,
Trev
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