Originally posted by SussexSeagull
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£50K Interest Free Loan for 12 Months
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Originally posted by jamesbrown View PostDidn't I list three options, of which getting an outside contract was one?
I guess you didn't really think this through. If you're hoping you can walk away from the BBL because you cannot secure a contract outside of IR35 or one where the fee payer agrees to contract with your company, then best of luck to you. I think your creditors will think differently and they will probably have a very good case. If any prospective client is mandating no PSCs or a contract that is inside, the debt remains and you'll still need to pay it back, end of story. It remains to be seen how aggressively your debt will be pursued by either the bank or HMG. Assuming they pursue it - as I think they will - then my point about the DL is that, if you chose to extract the BBL that way, then there is absolutely no argument about how the money is paid back. You've clarified that you didn't extract it that way. Am I supposed to read your mind? The question, then, will be whether you've met your statutory duties as director. TBD.
Now if you extracted it as a directors loan you need to pay back the directors loan but that obligation is independent of the bounce back loan obligation.Comment
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Originally posted by jayn200 View PostIt's a company debt with no personal guarantee. You have no personal obligation to pay it back to the bank or government.
Originally posted by jayn200 View PostNow if you extracted it as a directors loan you need to pay back the directors loan but that obligation is independent of the bounce back loan obligation.Comment
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Originally posted by jamesbrown View PostIf you're hoping you can walk away from the BBL because you cannot secure a contract outside of IR35 or one where the fee payer agrees to contract with your company, then best of luck to you.
Did I even say that? Anywhere?
Mine was a hypothetical comment on the scenario. A comment on the irony, if you will.
Your bouncing up and down assuming from this that, I wish to walk away from the loan is assumptive fiction. For the record. I don't and won't. Clear enough for you?Comment
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Originally posted by simes View PostDeary me.
Did I even say that? Anywhere?
Mine was a hypothetical comment on the scenario. A comment on the irony, if you will.
Your bouncing up and down assuming from this that, I wish to walk away from the loan is assumptive fiction. For the record. I don't and won't. Clear enough for you?
Clear enough for you?
Oh, and "you're".Comment
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Originally posted by jamesbrown View PostDeary me. As was mine. The clue's in the "if".
Clear enough for you?
Oh, and "you're".
We might be done here.Comment
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I just took a BBL and it's great for the war chest.
For those trying to abuse the system, here's the list of do and don't with the money from the BBL:
Do:
- Pay yourself via PAYE salary.
- Pay your pension because its company expense
- Buy new equipment or anything related.
Don't:
- Pay dividend. You can only pay dividend from company profit. Loan is not profit so you shouldn't do that.
- Pay corporation tax / vat. Again, it should have been money that stayed in your bank account to pay for that.
- Give yourself a director loan. Not only it may be considered as income by HMRC for extra tax owed, but you may also be chased for debt by administrators should your company fold.
As long as you do the "Do's", should you not be able to pay back the loan and decide to fold the company, you wouldn't owe anything to anyone.Last edited by cwah; 17 September 2020, 05:55.Comment
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Originally posted by cwah View PostI just took a BBL and it's great for the war chest.
For those trying to abuse the system, here's the list of do and don't with the money from the BBL:
Do:
- Pay yourself via PAYE salary.
- Pay your pension because its company expense
- Buy new equipment or anything related.
Don't:
- Pay dividend. You can only pay dividend from company profit. Loan is not profit so you shouldn't do that.
- Pay corporation tax / vat. Again, it should have been money that stayed in your bank account to pay for that.
- Give yourself a director loan. Not only it may be considered as income by HMRC for extra tax owed, but you may also be chased for debt by administrators should your company fold.
As long as you do the "Do's", should you not be able to pay back the loan and decide to fold the company, you wouldn't owe anything to anyone.
Anyone doing this and not having much in the company without any company assets can treat the bbl as a gift from Rishi like the half price burgers for the common peopleLast edited by LondonPM1; 18 September 2020, 12:47.Comment
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£50K Interest Free Loan for 12 Months
Good report on BBC news tonight, thousands of fraudsters applying in bulk for BBL loans
Free money
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