if other contractors are fannying around going on ClientCo's training courses, booking "leave" with HR, billing for time spent at Xmas lunches etc because "everyone gets paid", etc, but you yourself are not, could this potentially stuff things up for your IR35 status?
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can other peoples' working practices affect your IR35 status?
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can other peoples' working practices affect your IR35 status?
Originally posted by BolshieBastardYou're fulfilling a business role not partaking in a rock and roll concert. -
Originally posted by lambrini_socialist View Postif other contractors are fannying around going on ClientCo's training courses, booking "leave" with HR, billing for time spent at Xmas lunches etc because "everyone gets paid", etc, but you yourself are not, could this potentially stuff things up for your IR35 status?If your company is the best place to work in, for a mere £500 p/d, you can advertise here. -
i kind of mean, where they are comprehensively and in absolutely every respect behaving like employees. surely an IR35 review of my own working practices could end up tainted by this?Originally posted by BolshieBastardYou're fulfilling a business role not partaking in a rock and roll concert.Comment
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Originally posted by lambrini_socialist View Posti kind of mean, where they are comprehensively and in absolutely every respect behaving like employees. surely an IR35 review of my own working practices could end up tainted by this?If your company is the best place to work in, for a mere £500 p/d, you can advertise here.Comment
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It would depend on your 'working' practises rather than whether contractors you work with had integrated themselves into the social network of the company. However, if this was the general behaviour amongst the contractors that work there I would ask myself why. If a client company encourages the integration of contractors into the general workforce to the degree that you mentioned in the OP I would doubt that they would allow, for instance, an unfettered ROS.Comment
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Originally posted by LisaContractorUmbrella View PostI would doubt that they would allow, for instance, an unfettered ROS.Originally posted by BolshieBastardYou're fulfilling a business role not partaking in a rock and roll concert.Comment
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Originally posted by lambrini_socialist View Post...which i have, as it happens, and while i reckon i could invoke it if push came to shove, it would raise more than a few eyebrows (as i suspect is the case for most folks on here).Comment
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Originally posted by LisaContractorUmbrella View PostThis was the problem in the Dragonfly case - although the contractor had, what he saw, as an unfettered ROS, when it came down to it, the client stated that they would certainly not be happy with a replacement. Mr Justice Henderson even went to the extent of questioning whether a one-man limited company could excercise and ROS.If your company is the best place to work in, for a mere £500 p/d, you can advertise here.Comment
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Originally posted by pmeswani View PostWasn't the DragonFly case an exception rather than the rule? How long did the guy work at the client site?
Length of time on site makes no difference to IR35 status.Comment
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Originally posted by lambrini_socialist View Postif other contractors are fannying around going on ClientCo's training courses, booking "leave" with HR, billing for time spent at Xmas lunches etc because "everyone gets paid", etc, but you yourself are not, could this potentially stuff things up for your IR35 status?
It only takes the client to say "oh yes, he was just like the others, and it was like they all worked for us" to blow the case out of the water.Comment
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