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Complex IR35 issue

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    #21
    Seems odd that the exact amount of money owed equals the tax apparently owed.
    We don't 100% know this yet - it won't be - it will be a large part of it, maybe 60%. However, this person has already paid tax on it via his PAYE salary from his company which was less that his day rate at the client. So he will get double-taxed, and I assume HMRC won't refund that!

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      #22
      Originally posted by polarbearuk75 View Post

      four months ago, the company stopped paying all contractors
      Unreal.

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        #23
        Originally posted by polarbearuk75 View Post
        [*]If my colleague is found to be inside IR35, they would presumably be entitled to employment rights. Withheld wages, lack of holiday pay, and absence of other employment benefits could breach those rights. Question is which approach is now better - we think its outside, they think inside - and nothing will now change their mind. Learned that lesson myself the hard way.
        IR35 is about how you are taxed - it doesn't confer employment rights as you ought to know as you claim to have been working as a no-rights worker for ages.

        This is actually not a complex issue at all.

        The end client has behaved abominably, but your friend is unlikely to be able to get any cash from them, because the cost of any lawyers would be more than they would get back.

        Your friend needs to put this down to experience - and you need to brush up on your understanding of IR35 too.

        Comment


          #24
          I'm open to learning more about this.

          Currently, I work inside IR35 under an umbrella company, which provides holiday pay and pension and allows me to claim business expenses. I got an SDS, which I agreed to. My day rate is okay—nowhere near what I earned in the old days.

          I understand that I don't have typical employment rights, such as filing grievances or going to an Employment Tribunal. I don't want all the politics, office stuff and stay well clear of it all- been there done that. This is due to my arrangement with the umbrella company. Fair enough. I'm aware of what I've agreed to—it's not ideal, but it's the reality of today's job market in the work we do.

          However, I'm unsure how it works when there's no umbrella company, and you're contracted directly with the employer. They want to treat you as if you're outside IR35—offering no holiday pay, pension, or notice period—while paying you under IR35 rules.

          This means you're responsible for the Employer's NI, the Employee's NI, Income Tax, and the Apprenticeship Levy.

          For my friend - I finally got my hands on the SDS they sent out to everyone this week, which looks shocking with mixed contract terms with the Tax side. Not a SDS format I have ever seen before. No idea who is advising them. There is no way I would sign it—clearly, they don't want any more contractors.

          I know being inside IR35 is challenging, but this seems excessively unfair. How does this differ from a zero-hours contract at McDonald's? Even there, you don't have to pay the employer's NI and Apprenticeship Levy.

          I realise you answer these questions daily, and I understand everyone is fed up with it all—the government wants everyone to be permanently employed, with zero rights and no idea whether you will have a job or not.

          At the end of the day, the fact that this whole process allows a big company to force a group of people to work for X weeks for free should not be allowed in this day and age. Withholding wages is illegal as an employer—why should someone under IR35 NOT have the same rights? Our solicitor told me that the fact that there was a 3-month termination clause meant that if he had walked, he would have been at risk of breach of contract.

          No need to respond - in a grumbling mood now
          Last edited by polarbearuk75; 31 October 2024, 20:21.

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            #25
            Originally posted by polarbearuk75 View Post
            I understand that I don't have typical employment rights, such as filing grievances or going to an Employment Tribunal. I don't want all the politics, office stuff and stay well clear of it all- been there done that. This is due to my arrangement with the umbrella company.
            There's nothing to stop an umbrella company worker raising a grievance or an ET case against an umbrella company.
            My biggest gripe re umbrella companies is the pay-when-paid model. No other employer pays employees only when paid by a third party. Hence it's important to be prepared to 'down tools' rather than allow wages debt to accumulate.

            Originally posted by polarbearuk75 View Post
            However, I'm unsure how it works when there's no umbrella company, and you're contracted directly with the employer. They want to treat you as if you're outside IR35—offering no holiday pay, pension, or notice period—while paying you under IR35 rules.
            One doesn't have a contract with an employer, other than as an employee.
            Where there's a B2B contract that's generally between a contractor's LtdCo and the Client.
            Few would operate an 'inside' engagement via a LtdCo since it makes no commercial sense.

            Originally posted by polarbearuk75 View Post
            How does this differ from a zero-hours contract at McDonald's? Even there, you don't have to pay the employer's NI and Apprenticeship Levy.
            My understanding is that McDonald's engages workers as employees and accordingly pays employment taxes.

            Note that there are three possible IR35 states.
            An engagement may be 'outside', 'inside' or not assessed.

            The latter two states would mean that workers are engaged via an agency or an umbrella company (i.e. a payroll intermediary).

            Some people will even use an umbrella company for an 'outside' engagement; where there are no business costs incurred it's more cost effective than running a LtdCo and carries no tax risk (using a compliant umbrella company).




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              #26
              Sorry if I'm teaching you how to suck eggs but I think you are missing the fundamentals of contracting. The fact you keep calling them your employer is a massive red flag. You need to re-adjust your thinking..

              Employment requires a contract of employment with an employer and they pay you. Now lets forget all that.

              You have a contract with a client to do work regardless of IR35 status. It sets out the terms for that contractors engagement. The contract may have different terms in dependant on wether they expect that person to be inside or outside but its a contract non the less. The contractor that has this contract then needs a payment vehicle and that changes depending on inside or outside. So the chain so far looks like this. Client - Contractor (you) - Payment.
              Outside IR35 - Client - Contractor - LTD company - you.
              Inside IR35 - Client - Contractor - Umbrella - you.

              For the purposes of this basic description, the only difference between the two is how the tax is handled and the payment vehicle (LTD or Umbrella). None of this perm rubbish. You are still a contractor to a client in both cases. The contract for your services is between the client and the LTD in outside and client and umbrella for inside.
              What we should really be doing to do this properly is have a contract to deliver a whole piece of work and get paid at the end of it. The daily rate confuses the whole thing and which is why HMRC have done all this to us but sadly the market never went that way so we are where we are.

              You are an independant supplier to a client, not a permie, no zero hours etc. A contracted supplier. Always think like that. You are a business not an employee. Sadly HMRC thinks you are a temporary employee hence this mess. But having the right mind set makes it easier to understand things. You get me? Forget rights, employers, year raises and all that rubbish.

              However, I'm unsure how it works when there's no umbrella company, and you're contracted directly with the employer. They want to treat you as if you're outside IR35—offering no holiday pay, pension, or notice period—while paying you under IR35 rules.

              This means you're responsible for the Employer's NI, the Employee's NI, Income Tax, and the Apprenticeship Levy.
              I think you've for this backwards and they don't want to treat you as outside, that's a tax situation they don't want to know about. They've been forced in to giving SDS's or face the consequences so it's all as bad for them as it is you. All they want is a supplier to do some work as per a contract and that's what they do. They've got some hoops to jump through to cover their backs i.e. the SDS and then they get you in to start working. It makes no difference to you turning up and working if you are inside or outside. To contract directly with the client you need to be outside, if they don't want you outside then you cannot contract directly with the client.
              Even if they take you on inside they don't have to offer holiday pay pension etc.. that's handled by the payment vehicle mention above. The only time a client is ever on the hook for that is you are on an FTC contract which is effectively a contract of employment. As mentioned before, inside or outside makes no difference to the work you do for the client.

              There is so much wrong and many nuances missing out of that but it would take too long to be totally accurate. Just get your head around the basics of contracting first and the rest will fall in to place.

              That make it any clearer?
              'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

              Comment


                #27
                Originally posted by Peoplesoft bloke View Post

                IR35 is about how you are taxed - it doesn't confer employment rights as you ought to know as you claim to have been working as a no-rights worker for ages.

                This is actually not a complex issue at all.

                The end client has behaved abominably, but your friend is unlikely to be able to get any cash from them, because the cost of any lawyers would be more than they would get back.

                Your friend needs to put this down to experience - and you need to brush up on your understanding of IR35 too.
                I haven't got access to the figures or can claim to be a legal expert but several months worth of daily rate at Director level would seem to be very much worth pursuing.

                Comment


                  #28
                  Originally posted by SussexSeagull View Post

                  I haven't got access to the figures or can claim to be a legal expert but several months worth of daily rate at Director level would seem to be very much worth pursuing.
                  I didn't say it wasn't worth it - but it may well not be cost effective.

                  Comment


                    #29
                    Originally posted by northernladuk View Post
                    Get his own lawyer to respond. I did believe this is nothing more than a breach of contract at first though. The IR35 noise is just.... noise. He had a contract that explicitly states payment upon work done. He did work, he didn't get paid. Now they are using the outstanding money to pay the tax they should have taken off him from day one then it's just got a whole lot more complicated.
                    This reminds me of cases along the lines of "we've had to use the money we owe you in order to meet liabilities caused by you" that we've heard many times here.

                    The issue is would a judge rule the OP's friend was paid net of tax and NI? Yes, the client has to meet the tax NI bil. No, he was paid gross, in which case the client needs to issue proper payslips.
                    Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!

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