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Offshore Contract, Residency & Domicility

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    #11
    OK so.

    A follow up to this.

    If I leave the UK on the 1st of december for 184 days.

    Should I go the non-resident route?

    Should I go for non-resident just in case I extend to 9 months?

    Or will i always be considered resident because of my maintaining a house here and my intention to return by the next school year for my son?

    Comment


      #12
      Originally posted by prozak View Post
      OK so.

      A follow up to this.

      If I leave the UK on the 1st of december for 184 days.

      Should I go the non-resident route?

      Should I go for non-resident just in case I extend to 9 months?

      Or will i always be considered resident because of my maintaining a house here and my intention to return by the next school year for my son?
      Residency and domicile are different - it may be more complicated if you're not domiciled here though.

      If you're resident in the UK for 183 days in any tax year then you're usually deemed resident here for that tax year, so that covers 2011. What happens in 2012 depends on when you come back, and potentially any visits you make. In some circumstances 'split year' treatment is available, although the rules around this are changing.

      I'd suggest a full discussion with your accountant, it's one of those talks that could digress into different scenarios depending on how long you're away (and whether there's any tax advantage to staying away longer). You also need to know the tax laws in the country you're going to as they could impact on your movements and whether you WANT to lose residency here. Your accountant should be able to research that for you, or point you in the direction of someone who knows more.
      ContractorUK Best Forum Adviser 2013

      Comment


        #13
        So-long Georgie boy

        Originally posted by prozak View Post
        OK so.

        A follow up to this.

        If I leave the UK on the 1st of december for 184 days.

        Should I go the non-resident route?

        Should I go for non-resident just in case I extend to 9 months?

        Or will i always be considered resident because of my maintaining a house here and my intention to return by the next school year for my son?
        I personally would advise you to fill the form in when you leave giving them notice you are non-resident from the 1st Dec although you are unlikely to pass the residency test, however if it it turns into the most amazing gig and you are offered a permanent position with fantastic terms and you decide to stay you are 1 year ahead of the game. If you don't you will have lost nothing as all you will pay is the tax that is due. Just fill the form in yourself you don't need to pay an accountant to do it for you. For those thinking of a more permanent move the residency tests are based on a number of factors, here are some simple ones - you can still own a house but if it's not rented out you can return to it at anytime so does not suggest you have left permanently. If your wife and children remain you will almost certainly be classed as still resident in the UK and if you take certain tax benefits and return within 5 years you will get politely asked to pay back some of the benefit.

        Form P85 linky -

        http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/cnr/p85.pdf

        Comment


          #14
          Originally posted by Clare@InTouch View Post
          Residency and domicile are different - it may be more complicated if you're not domiciled here though.

          If you're resident in the UK for 183 days in any tax year then you're usually deemed resident here for that tax year, so that covers 2011. What happens in 2012 depends on when you come back, and potentially any visits you make. In some circumstances 'split year' treatment is available, although the rules around this are changing.

          I'd suggest a full discussion with your accountant, it's one of those talks that could digress into different scenarios depending on how long you're away (and whether there's any tax advantage to staying away longer). You also need to know the tax laws in the country you're going to as they could impact on your movements and whether you WANT to lose residency here. Your accountant should be able to research that for you, or point you in the direction of someone who knows more.
          yes I am non-domiciled. but reading the remittance basis I'm unlikely to earn enough on this contract to making use of the non-dom worthwhile

          Ah right. That cleared one thing up. it is 183 days in the tax year. So I would have to stay away until after september in 2012 to be non-resident that year.

          thanks

          Comment


            #15
            Originally posted by geoff from contracta IOM View Post
            I personally would advise you to fill the form in when you leave giving them notice you are non-resident from the 1st Dec although you are unlikely to pass the residency test, however if it it turns into the most amazing gig and you are offered a permanent position with fantastic terms and you decide to stay you are 1 year ahead of the game. If you don't you will have lost nothing as all you will pay is the tax that is due. Just fill the form in yourself you don't need to pay an accountant to do it for you. For those thinking of a more permanent move the residency tests are based on a number of factors, here are some simple ones - you can still own a house but if it's not rented out you can return to it at anytime so does not suggest you have left permanently. If your wife and children remain you will almost certainly be classed as still resident in the UK and if you take certain tax benefits and return within 5 years you will get politely asked to pay back some of the benefit.

            Form P85 linky -

            http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/cnr/p85.pdf

            sound advice.

            the only complication is whether i invoice wit my UK ltd company or set up an offshore.

            I'm leaning to setting up offshore.

            Comment


              #16
              Originally posted by prozak View Post
              sound advice.

              the only complication is whether i invoice wit my UK ltd company or set up an offshore.

              I'm leaning to setting up offshore.
              In your case it would be better to speak to an accountant to advise on the best use of your non-dom for overseas income but if the likely timescales you have given hold true you will not be away long enough to break you tax residency in the UK so your Ltd Co. is probably the most effective vehicle and try for part year treatment on your divies.
              Last edited by geoff from contracta IOM; 12 October 2011, 14:28.

              Comment


                #17
                Originally posted by Greg@CapitalCity View Post
                (1) Any dividends you receive from the ltd company up to the next 05 Apr after you leave will be taxable in the UK;
                Not quite correct see http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/cnr/hmrc6.pdf page 43 8.1.1 The year you leave which says:

                Although the normal rule in law is that you are taxed as a resident for the
                whole of the tax year in which you are UK resident, there is an extra-statutory
                concession (ESC A11) that allows the tax year to be split. The effect of this
                concession is that you have to pay UK tax as a resident only for the part of the
                tax year before you finally leave.

                Comment

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