Ok, this was an early contract for me. I was very niaive and I didn't fully understand IR35 and I made a couple of mistakes, which I wouldn't do now. However...
There's a previous contract I had that, from a 'Working Practices' pov, will not pass any IR35 inspection.
I was brought in for a specific purpose, which was fine, but then in the small team I was working alongside, everyone just left. After being there for 2 months, 4 people from a 5 people team had gone (I don't think it was anything personal).
It was then an 'all hands to the pump' situation and, from the teams's point of view, getting the BAU stuff done was more important than the project I was working on, in the short term. My hands were included in the 'all hands'.
It never occured to me at the time, and I guess that was niaivety on my part. Although if I'd said 'This is not in my contract, I'm here to do 'X', IR35 etc....', I'd have been out of the door.
So, rightly or wrongly, I am where I am and I need to think about what to do.
I guess the easiest course of action would be to put some money to one side, in case there's ever an investigation and the taxman laughs at me whilst saying "Yes, you DO owe me £X".
Has anyone else been in this situation?
Have you/ would you point-blank refuse to help out with BAU stuff if it was a desperate situation for the client, knowing it could breach IR35?
Also, it was a 6 month contract. Probably only 2-3 months of that time was as described, the rest was as per contract (ie. outside of IR35), will HMRC accept that, if it comes to it, or do they take an all or nothing approach regarding the length of contract (ie. the whole contract length is either in or out)?
How long do I need to be wary of this? Is there a point when I can just forget about it?
There's a previous contract I had that, from a 'Working Practices' pov, will not pass any IR35 inspection.
I was brought in for a specific purpose, which was fine, but then in the small team I was working alongside, everyone just left. After being there for 2 months, 4 people from a 5 people team had gone (I don't think it was anything personal).
It was then an 'all hands to the pump' situation and, from the teams's point of view, getting the BAU stuff done was more important than the project I was working on, in the short term. My hands were included in the 'all hands'.
It never occured to me at the time, and I guess that was niaivety on my part. Although if I'd said 'This is not in my contract, I'm here to do 'X', IR35 etc....', I'd have been out of the door.
So, rightly or wrongly, I am where I am and I need to think about what to do.
I guess the easiest course of action would be to put some money to one side, in case there's ever an investigation and the taxman laughs at me whilst saying "Yes, you DO owe me £X".
Has anyone else been in this situation?
Have you/ would you point-blank refuse to help out with BAU stuff if it was a desperate situation for the client, knowing it could breach IR35?
Also, it was a 6 month contract. Probably only 2-3 months of that time was as described, the rest was as per contract (ie. outside of IR35), will HMRC accept that, if it comes to it, or do they take an all or nothing approach regarding the length of contract (ie. the whole contract length is either in or out)?
How long do I need to be wary of this? Is there a point when I can just forget about it?
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