Originally posted by psychocandy
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How much rate rise to cover no expensese after 2 year rule kicks in?
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"Israel, Palestine, Cats." He Said
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Originally posted by psychocandy View PostHas anyone EVER managed to get client to agree to this based on contractor explaining the 24 month rule to them?
Can just see it.
Contractor: Thing is for 2 years I've managed not to pay tax on all my travelling costs and saved myself couple of £100 a month in tax.
Client: You mean travel to work like us permies pay for out our net salary? That must be nice for you.
Contractor: Yes. Thing is I want £x per day to cover this or I'll be worse off.
Client: So you've been here 2 years, getting x times more than the permies, you've been milking the tax system, and now its over you want us to pay more?
Contractor: Yes please.
(BTW. Not saying I agree with this conversation but this is how client may think rightly or wrongly. 90% IMHO seem to think the start rate is the rate forever).Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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Originally posted by Grinder View PostWhy not ask to work 2 days on site, 3 days at home. Then the 24 month rule doesn't apply.Blood in your pooComment
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Originally posted by Sausage Surprise View PostCurrently claim around £1000 a month for accommodation, mileage and subsistence.
When this all stops after the 2 year rule kicks in, how much extra per month would you need to cover it with a rate rise?
Edit: Bollocks - typo in header!
You might get a 100 quid a week if you're plucky enough.I couldn't give two fornicators! Yes, really!Comment
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Originally posted by PerfectStorm View PostComplaining about the 24 month rule is like complaining over the bedroom tax; you're not losing out, you're just winning slightly less than you used to. You're still on top.Comment
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Originally posted by unixman View PostTrue, it has to be "grossed up".
Meanwhile, the company profit increases by £1000 a month, so corporation tax goes up by £200. Your company is worse off by £200 and you are worse off by £666. (all other things assumed equal)
So is the answer 886/20 = £44.30 ?
600 is 400 less than 1000.
400 / 20 days = £20 per day.Comment
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Originally posted by SpontaneousOrder View PostNo. If you're already a higher rate tax payer, then profit goes up by £1000. CT = £200 leaving £800. That £800 taken as dividend is taxed at an effective 25% leaving £600.
600 is 400 less than 1000.
400 / 20 days = £20 per day.Comment
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Originally posted by TheFaQQer View PostYou need £1000 out as a dividend to pay the expenses, not £800.Comment
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Originally posted by TheFaQQer View PostYou need £1000 out as a dividend to pay the expenses, not £800.
That's assuming you don't already take out 100% so there is a full 1k to take out as divi.Comment
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"I was giving you a discounted B2B rate for the first 2 years because the government lets me pay reduced tax."Comment
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