So far for this company year the company has declared and paid out several dividends, paid out a single lump sum pension contribution, and no salary.
The company would now like to pay a lump sum annual salary to the director (me) and a further contribution direct to my pension. There are also a small amount of outstanding expenses owed to the director. There is enough post-tax profit to cover the salary + pension + expenses.
The company has cash deposit in a 30-day notice account which I do not want to touch, but without this there is a cashflow problem to pay the salary + pension + expenses within the company year.
Questions (and presumptions):
1) I believe the pension contribution *must* be physically paid (direct to the fund) within this company year in order to be deductible against this year's profit.
2) The expenses may be booked to the director's loan account so they are deductible from this year's profit but remain owed to the director after year end.
3) Can the lump sum annual salary also be booked to the DLA, deductible from this year's profit, declared via RTI this year, but actually paid in the following year?
4) After booking the salary + expenses to the DLA there still might not be quite enough cash to cover the desired pension contribution (it depends on client invoice payment which is due right now). Can the director (me) loan the company a few £k in order to cover the shortfall needed to pay my desired pension contribution? Even if it can legally do this, might it look dodgy from an HMRC/PAYE point of view?
Depending upon answers/corrections to the above, I'm thinking that it may be sensible to defer the pension contribution to after this company year, but still within the tax year. Sure there would be more CT to pay this year, but that is offset by less CT next year. The company accounts would also show shareholder funds slightly higher than they would have. Other than that, would there be any practical difference either for company or personal taxation, or for that matter any potential IR35 charge?
The company would now like to pay a lump sum annual salary to the director (me) and a further contribution direct to my pension. There are also a small amount of outstanding expenses owed to the director. There is enough post-tax profit to cover the salary + pension + expenses.
The company has cash deposit in a 30-day notice account which I do not want to touch, but without this there is a cashflow problem to pay the salary + pension + expenses within the company year.
Questions (and presumptions):
1) I believe the pension contribution *must* be physically paid (direct to the fund) within this company year in order to be deductible against this year's profit.
2) The expenses may be booked to the director's loan account so they are deductible from this year's profit but remain owed to the director after year end.
3) Can the lump sum annual salary also be booked to the DLA, deductible from this year's profit, declared via RTI this year, but actually paid in the following year?
4) After booking the salary + expenses to the DLA there still might not be quite enough cash to cover the desired pension contribution (it depends on client invoice payment which is due right now). Can the director (me) loan the company a few £k in order to cover the shortfall needed to pay my desired pension contribution? Even if it can legally do this, might it look dodgy from an HMRC/PAYE point of view?
Depending upon answers/corrections to the above, I'm thinking that it may be sensible to defer the pension contribution to after this company year, but still within the tax year. Sure there would be more CT to pay this year, but that is offset by less CT next year. The company accounts would also show shareholder funds slightly higher than they would have. Other than that, would there be any practical difference either for company or personal taxation, or for that matter any potential IR35 charge?
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