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Cancelled assignment

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    #41
    Originally posted by Magpie2121 View Post
    SJD accountancy have told me there is no minimum contract term with them so I can potentially leave after a few months If I want to.
    Of course you can, but you'll still have to sort out your final accounts. If you're with SJD (or any other accountant) for a couple of months, they're not going to throw that in for free. Make sure you understand the costs before going down that road - it's not like an umbrella; you're a company director and you have to close that company properly with all the paperwork that involves.

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      #42
      Originally posted by mudskipper View Post
      Of course you can, but you'll still have to sort out your final accounts. If you're with SJD (or any other accountant) for a couple of months, they're not going to throw that in for free. Make sure you understand the costs before going down that road - it's not like an umbrella; you're a company director and you have to close that company properly with all the paperwork that involves.
      +1, Forget the Ltd for now, get yourself a decent 3 month full time contract and some money in the warchest first, stick with the Umbrella, what is it that you do exactly?

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        #43
        Originally posted by Stevie Wonder Boy
        What you may want to do is to give your wife a 50% stake in the company, you would then make her a director in your company.

        You need to do this when you form the company, not later otherwise HMRC will treat this as a gift. Any dividends paid would then be distributed to both you and your wife on an equal basis.
        Why would you make her a director?

        Would HMRC necessarily treat it as a gift?

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          #44
          Originally posted by Old Greg View Post
          Why would you make her a director?

          Would HMRC necessarily treat it as a gift?
          He thinks director = shareholder.

          Magpie2121 talk to your accountant about giving your wife shares and the pitfalls of making her any officer position in your company.
          "You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR

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            #45
            Originally posted by Old Greg View Post
            Why would you make her a director?
            You wouldn't. My wife is a director without being a shareholder, though

            Originally posted by Old Greg View Post
            Would HMRC necessarily treat it as a gift?
            No
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              #46
              Originally posted by SueEllen View Post
              He thinks director = shareholder.

              Magpie2121 talk to your accountant about giving your wife shares and the pitfalls of making her any officer position in your company.
              With that level of understand I would say don't. It's not something you want to get in to if you don't have a clue. You give introduce her to the business and do it properly, not defacto standard just to gain a tax advantage. It's not a standard part of business set up as some people seem to think.
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