Hmm, I'm a bit confused I suppose as I've only seen FTCs advertised with a salary so easy to find out net pay. An advert quoting as a day rate is wrong surely, imagine a "normal" permie role being advertised this way :-)
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650 FTC is more or less than 650 inside IR35
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The devil is in the details. For employer it can be cheaper to pay exactly the same amount as FTC than invoice because may not need to pay VAT. If it's exactly like for like (your ftc is = number of WORKING days * 650 less employers costs less pension) then you are loosing flexibility of deciding about putting less money in pension. On the other hand they may pay 100% sick leave for the first six months from day 1Originally posted by picklerick View Post
Jeebs thats so crap, let me confirm, if that's the case I wouldn't have even bothered applying let alone interviewing. Thanks a lot.
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Employee benefits ...Originally posted by picklerick View Post
What are the perks then?
- Pension scheme, potentially with salary sacrifice
- Paid holidays
- Paid sickness
- Opportunity to apply for more senior roles with employer, which would not be otherwise available
- Not likely to get terminated with no notice
I'm not quite sure that the option of a salaried FTC is on the table along with a day-rate option... or have I misunderstood this point ?
Using my own umbrella model by way of example.
Say, £650/day, 17 days worked in a given month with 30% of gross to salary sacrifice pension. In rough numbers, that's £3.3k pension, and £6k salary after NI etc., out of which you then pay PAYE taxes! This assumes 'rolled-up' holiday pay which is not technically allowed!
I'd suggest getting an illustration from an Umbrella company to reflect your own working pattern and pension contributions.Last edited by Protagoras; 13 January 2023, 18:59.Comment
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Like I said, on that basis the salary will be calculated on 650 x number of working days in the contract, assuming that 650 is not an agency fantasy. The gross salary on offer will be that number annualised and then halved to cover employer overheads. What you get paid is that number for the duration so six months gig you halve it again. Then extract PAYE and EeNICs.Originally posted by Protagoras View Post
Employee benefits ...
- Pension scheme, potentially with salary sacrifice
- Paid holidays
- Paid sickness
- Opportunity to apply for more senior roles with employer, which would not be otherwise available
- Not likely to get terminated with no notice
I'm not quite sure that the option of a salaried FTC is on the table along with a day-rate option... or have I misunderstood this point ?
Using my own umbrella model by way of example.
Say, £650/day, 17 days worked in a given month with 30% of gross to salary sacrifice pension. In rough numbers, that's £3.3k pension, and £6k salary after NI etc., out of which you then pay PAYE taxes! This assumes 'rolled-up' holiday pay which is not technically allowed!
I'd suggest getting an illustration from an Umbrella company to reflect your own working pattern and pension contributions.
Not quite so attractive now is it....?Blog? What blog...?
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Just to double check : In order to achieve 3.3 pension and 6K after NI / income tax you would need a PAYE salary of 160K. I do not know many roles paying that. My company pays 3% pension and has 25 days holiday. Sickness I have never taken advantage of, no seniority and termination happens just like any other employment when money dries upOriginally posted by Protagoras View Post
Employee benefits ...
- Pension scheme, potentially with salary sacrifice
- Paid holidays
- Paid sickness
- Opportunity to apply for more senior roles with employer, which would not be otherwise available
- Not likely to get terminated with no notice
I'm not quite sure that the option of a salaried FTC is on the table along with a day-rate option... or have I misunderstood this point ?
Using my own umbrella model by way of example.
Say, £650/day, 17 days worked in a given month with 30% of gross to salary sacrifice pension. In rough numbers, that's £3.3k pension, and £6k salary after NI etc., out of which you then pay PAYE taxes! This assumes 'rolled-up' holiday pay which is not technically allowed!
I'd suggest getting an illustration from an Umbrella company to reflect your own working pattern and pension contributions.
This is why I follow these threads so joyfullyComment
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Oh dear, that’s not very good.Originally posted by NowPermOutsideUK View PostMy company pays 3% pension and has 25 days holiday. Sickness I have never taken advantage of, no seniority and termination happens just like any other employment when money dries up
Medical industry pensions are 3x or more of your pension.
Most companies have holidays + stats, i.e. you say 25, that’s actually 32 days.
”Sickness” isn’t something you “take advantage of”, it’s there if you get sick.
As for you never getting promoted and not learning anything from training, that’s not really anyone else’s fault but you.
Please don’t judge everyone else on how you live, but at least you are joyful earning what you earn, even if your every post on here is coming up with daily rate = permanent salary, while ignoring all the nuances.…Maybe we ain’t that young anymoreComment
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To clarify, my estimate was from the perspective of someone being paid on a contracted worker basis (day rate * days worked) via an umbrella company. The £6k was net of employer and employee NI, apprentice levy and estimated umbrella margin.Originally posted by NowPermOutsideUK View Post
Just to double check : In order to achieve 3.3 pension and 6K after NI / income tax you would need a PAYE salary of 160K.
It was not stated to be net of PAYE tax.
"In rough numbers, that's £3.3k pension, and £6k salary after NI etc., out of which you then pay PAYE taxes!"
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I don't see that being an issue. If the employer is VAT registered then it makes no difference whether they pay the VAT to your company (and your company gives it to HMRC) or whether they pay that VAT to HMRC directly, i.e. it won't cost them anything extra.Originally posted by fabios View PostFor employer it can be cheaper to pay exactly the same amount as FTC than invoice because may not need to pay VAT.
Bear in mind that any company with a turnover of £85,000 or higher must be VAT registered. In this example, they'd be paying double that just for the 12 month FTC, and presumably they have other employees as well.Comment
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FTFYOriginally posted by NowPermOutsideUK View Post
This is why I post the same tedious rubbish time after timeHe who Hingeth aboot, Getteth Hee Haw. https://forums.contractoruk.com/core...ies/smokin.gifComment
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Having just finished an inside Ir35 gig - the perk of FTC for me would be getting paid on time without a lot of faffing about.Originally posted by picklerick View Post
Thanks for the reply. What are the perks then? My holiday is taken out of my salary, I'm not paid for it, i'm micromanaged. I don't see any perks anywhere. Just seems like an even worse version of ir35
Umbrella co were excellent at coughing up once paid but Agent kept claiming not have had invoices/timesheets etc etc - they also tried to get me to agree to 30 day terms (so 60 days to first payment). It was all hassle I don't need - ironically I never had issues getting paid on time when I had my limited co.Comment
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