Originally posted by Ardesco
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Originally posted by Ardesco View PostYou won't get very far trying to say that the contract you have signed is not what you are working to when you go to court.
Your contract must reflect your working practice, I thought I'd made this point strongly enough earlier but its not just all about your contract. If you have the best contract in the world but still live at home, you work 9-5 for x pounds per hour, you do not invest in IT at all, you wear a permie badge and do the same role then you are a disguised employee even if your contract says not.
If I have an office, employ two staff, work mainly on completion paid work, hold insurance, advertise, invest in IT heavily etc etc and have one contract which has one term that might point to employment it does not mean I am then caught within IR35. It just means there is a pointer against self-employment nothing more.Comment
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Originally posted by backgetyou View PostI could not agree more but this is not what was being discussed. The issue I stated is that having a notice period, paid or unpaid, at home at work etc will not change your tax position alone.
Your contract must reflect your working practice, I thought I'd made this point strongly enough earlier but its not just all about your contract. If you have the best contract in the world but still live at home, you work 9-5 for x pounds per hour, you do not invest in IT at all, you wear a permie badge and do the same role then you are a disguised employee even if your contract says not.
If I have an office, employ two staff, work mainly on completion paid work, hold insurance, advertise, invest in IT heavily etc etc and have one contract which has one term that might point to employment it does not mean I am then caught within IR35. It just means there is a pointer against self-employment nothing more.
And if you want a good current example, the directors of the PCG receive an annual stipend on which they pay IR35 regardless of their other, more traditional and very clearly non-IR35 contract work.Blog? What blog...?Comment
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Originally posted by backgetyou View PostHave you had any investigation at all with either the IR or for VAT? Are you speaking form experience? What was the end result of your investigation?
Originally posted by backgetyou View PostYour contract must reflect your working practice, I thought I'd made this point strongly enough earlier but its not just all about your contract. If you have the best contract in the world but still live at home, you work 9-5 for x pounds per hour, you do not invest in IT at all, you wear a permie badge and do the same role then you are a disguised employee even if your contract says not.
Once you have got over that initial hurdle you then need to start worrying about working conditions.
Originally posted by backgetyou View PostIf I have an office, employ two staff, work mainly on completion paid work, hold insurance, advertise, invest in IT heavily etc etc and have one contract which has one term that might point to employment it does not mean I am then caught within IR35. It just means there is a pointer against self-employment nothing more.Comment
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Originally posted by Ardesco View PostNot speaking from personal experience, but I know a couple of people who have been through them. Aspect investigation they weren't interested in contracts specifically just a bunch of documents for a set period so they could check that the paperwork matched the accounts.
I know that the contract is only half the game, but it is an important half. If the contract is IR35 caught you are caught full stop. It doesn't matter what your working practices are like if the contract is caught so IMHO it is very important that the contract is IR35 complient.
Once you have got over that initial hurdle you then need to start worrying about working conditions.
Each contract is asessed individually. You will get caught by IR35 on a contract by contract basis you can have 3 concurrent contracts running at the same time and be outside IR35 for two of them and caught for one of them. The above example implies you don't fully understand the process, you cannot get out of IR35 by having most of your contracts deemed outside IR35.
Turning to this, you have not been investigated how long have you contracted for? Those people that were investigated how many times have they been investigated?Comment
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Originally posted by backgetyou View PostEach contract assessed individually is only one component of an investigation as I stated. If I have one term that points to self employment in one contract, my working practice points to self-employed. The other 40 terms point to self employed, the other 50 contracts point to self-employed you should be deemed as fully compliant, that is if you are investigated.
Turning to this, you have not been investigated how long have you contracted for? Those people that were investigated how many times have they been investigated?ǝןqqıʍComment
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Originally posted by backgetyou View PostEach contract assessed individually is only one component of an investigation as I stated. If I have one term that points to self employment in one contract, working practice points to self-employed. The other 40 terms point to self employed, the other 50 contracts point to self-employed you should be deemed as fully compliant, that is if you are investigated.
If this contract is 90% of the income for that year you are probably going to have a bad year
HTHComment
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Originally posted by backgetyou View PostNo it won't. If I am employed to perform a function for five days in Newcastle and I live in Liverpool. I drive all the way there book into my hotel and turn up at the agreed time but the client says sorry we cant do the work this week for this reason I am supposed to say dont worry I dont want the tax man chasing me we will call it quits.
You have not performed those services. No supply has taken place so no charge can be levied.
They are under no obligation to supply you with work. If they are then that is MOO and you are a disguised employee. Whether you think this is fair or not is immaterial HMRC will use this to classify you as a disguised employee and ask for more tax.
Originally posted by backgetyou View PostIf I employ a serviceman and he turns up but cant do the work as I changed my mine he will charge a call out charge. For this all he will have done is turn up the call out charge can disproportiante but the IR wont say to him you are not self employed now as you got paid nor nowt. Get real, most tradesman try and get paid for nowt.
Originally posted by backgetyou View PostClearly you have no PM experience, you often have to pay a third party for sitting on their butts if a dependency is stalled. What if I work in support and I have no calls do you think you should not be paid?
I'll apologise because we have differing ideas about what a business and business risk are. Admittedly I was working with the client global sourcing initiative that gave me a power trip but I was dealing with businesses not support monkeys hiding from the tax man by using a Ltd (which if we are honest is what most IT contractors are)
Originally posted by backgetyou View PostThe Inland Revenue would not even have a clue that you were being paid for not supplying anything unless you told them anyway. The Inland Revenue look at your whole working process and will only make deeper investigations if they see something wrong and that something has SIGNIFICANT value to it and the chances of recovery make it worth following up.
She has legal fee protection, ir35 safe contract etc.Comment
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Originally posted by Sockpuppet View Postbut I was dealing with businesses not support monkeys hiding from the tax man by using a Ltd (which if we are honest is what most IT contractors are)Very well put.
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