I don't know if this has been covered elsewhere, but I couldn't find a similar post.
I was interested to hear from other contractors around their approach to managing dividends up to and past the 10% dividend threshold. I had always continued to take any more dividends past the first threshold, and simply pay the additional 30% tax on these as required. However speaking to other contractors in my office, a couple say that at the 10% tax threshold they take any additional money as a director's loan, and then repay this back to the company the next tax year with interest (to avoid the benefit in kind), which still works out cheaper than a 30% dividend tax.
Does anyone know how common this is , and whether this does work out any cheaper in the long run than paying the 30% dividend tax on higher earnings?
RTB
I was interested to hear from other contractors around their approach to managing dividends up to and past the 10% dividend threshold. I had always continued to take any more dividends past the first threshold, and simply pay the additional 30% tax on these as required. However speaking to other contractors in my office, a couple say that at the 10% tax threshold they take any additional money as a director's loan, and then repay this back to the company the next tax year with interest (to avoid the benefit in kind), which still works out cheaper than a 30% dividend tax.
Does anyone know how common this is , and whether this does work out any cheaper in the long run than paying the 30% dividend tax on higher earnings?
RTB
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