Originally posted by psychocandy
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I will stand by what I say that we use loopholes. Maybe that is the wrong word but we use a system that wasn't really designed for us and so much of it comes down to opinion or individual circumstances, something law and regulation struggles with. The gove is constantly reviewing income shifting and IR35 so they are obviously not happy. HMRC are constant taking people to court because in their eyes it is also wrong.
If things as small as moving divis in to your wife/joint account or paying 70/30 split is ok but her moving it back to you or paying 50/50 is not it shows how close to the line we work it. At the bottom line ask the question why do we give divis to our partners? In a large majority of, or even all cases it is to avoid paying extra tax. That in itself is wrong from the HMRC but we assume it is our god given right just because we own a LTD. We talk about paying our partners 7k for work in the business when in reality there is no way in hell they are doing 7k's of work and so on. Yes we think we can justify it and think we are right but think about how this looks from HMRC.
Much of this is also open to some interpretation and as in life we interprate it to suit our needs which mean we have a battle royal once we get investigated. The insurance is there because we have made a market for it by operating these schemes. If the law was black and white, there was no interpretation and we followed the spirit not the word it would not be required.
Maybe it sounds more like I work for HMRC and I am putting an unfair spin on it but I am trying to put the other side of the argument to help you understand.
All that said I am happy to use the rules to suit me where I feel I can justify it. I do have a share set up for my other director but it is much much smaller than mine but I do not pay the full 7K a year because I feel I cannot fully justify it.
It's far too complex to explain in one post and these are my opinions but hope it helps.



- Opinion is exactly what it is, its the key word for the whole of IR35.
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