Whilst I think the Aston Mae scheme is (removed by cuk), the link given by the previous poster deals with a scheme which is different from that operated by Aston Mae.
In the Aston Mae scheme, you pay at least the market rate of interest on the loan, so interest on the loan is not treated as a BIK. The trick is in the way that you avoid repaying the loan without it becoming a BIK. This trick seems to have two components to it, neither of which I am clever enough to understand.
1: the loan is not a personal loan but a corporate loan. It is paid from moneys held in an employee trust, from which the loan is made "at arm's length".
2: AM have a way of "annulling" the loan, about which they have provided me with no details at all, except to mention verbally that it is to do with Intellectual Property.
One should bear in mind that, in exchange for an additional management fee of 0.5%, they provide a warranty against any investigation or penalties from HMRC. However, if their clients (I have no idea if they have any) are penalised en masse, one wonders if AM would be able to make good on the warranty. Since they are located outside of the EU, one wonder what recourse we would have?
There is also, dare I say, a moral aspect in that I don't want to be a freeloader on a society whose benefits I am happy to enjoy when I need them. I should really pay my way, although I currently pay myself entirely in dividends to avoid paying NI, so I am perhaps a little hypocritical on that score
In the Aston Mae scheme, you pay at least the market rate of interest on the loan, so interest on the loan is not treated as a BIK. The trick is in the way that you avoid repaying the loan without it becoming a BIK. This trick seems to have two components to it, neither of which I am clever enough to understand.
1: the loan is not a personal loan but a corporate loan. It is paid from moneys held in an employee trust, from which the loan is made "at arm's length".
2: AM have a way of "annulling" the loan, about which they have provided me with no details at all, except to mention verbally that it is to do with Intellectual Property.
One should bear in mind that, in exchange for an additional management fee of 0.5%, they provide a warranty against any investigation or penalties from HMRC. However, if their clients (I have no idea if they have any) are penalised en masse, one wonders if AM would be able to make good on the warranty. Since they are located outside of the EU, one wonder what recourse we would have?
There is also, dare I say, a moral aspect in that I don't want to be a freeloader on a society whose benefits I am happy to enjoy when I need them. I should really pay my way, although I currently pay myself entirely in dividends to avoid paying NI, so I am perhaps a little hypocritical on that score

) is how far you want to stretch the legal definition of whatever avoidance measures you are taking.

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