This is for PlanB co, and PlanB co cannot afford an accountant, so please don't suggest asking one ;-)
I have to do a CT return, which as I understand it is based on the amount invoiced, not the amount that's been paid. But in this case there are quite a few invoices unpaid from the one near-death client, and I'm not at all confident of ever seeing the money.
Presumably if the client had gone bust, then I'd be okay to write off those invoices as bad debts and not pay the CT. But is there some kind of minimum stage where I can treat the debt as bad? E.g. if unpaid for 6 months can I treat it as a bad debt, and then what happens if the client does eventually pay up?
I understand I will eventually get the CT refunded even if I pay what turns out to be too much for this year.
Thanks for any words of wisdom.
I have to do a CT return, which as I understand it is based on the amount invoiced, not the amount that's been paid. But in this case there are quite a few invoices unpaid from the one near-death client, and I'm not at all confident of ever seeing the money.
Presumably if the client had gone bust, then I'd be okay to write off those invoices as bad debts and not pay the CT. But is there some kind of minimum stage where I can treat the debt as bad? E.g. if unpaid for 6 months can I treat it as a bad debt, and then what happens if the client does eventually pay up?
I understand I will eventually get the CT refunded even if I pay what turns out to be too much for this year.
Thanks for any words of wisdom.
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