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Problems with Ltd Co being registered at Leasehold residence

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    Problems with Ltd Co being registered at Leasehold residence

    Hi

    has anyone had any challenge from their Leasehold management co in having registered their Ltd Co at their home address? I reside in a Leasehold apartment and carry on no business activity other than receiving my Ltd company mail at my home address.

    I am being accused of breaching the "single residential dwelling condition" within the lease!

    My lawyer believes there is no case to answer but I am interested if anyone else in the Contractor Ltd Co world has faced this.

    PR

    #2
    No.

    HTH
    The Chunt of Chunts.

    Comment


      #3
      It would be a lot cheaper to just register it somewhere else with mail forwarded rather than pay legal fees...

      Also, do you properly display company name plaque in front of building/flat to comply with registration requirements???

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by AtW View Post
        It would be a lot cheaper to just register it somewhere else with mail forwarded rather than pay legal fees...

        Also, do you properly display company name plaque in front of building/flat to comply with registration requirements???
        Can also be easier, if you are renting and therefore moving often.
        The Chunt of Chunts.

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by AtW View Post
          Also, do you properly display company name plaque in front of building/flat to comply with registration requirements???
          Last time I looked into that, the current interpretation of the law was that the information must be visible to actual visitors to the premises, and therefore having it stuck up somewhere just inside the front door, where somebody could see it when the door was opened to them, was sufficient.

          But IANAL. Maybe the government is collecting hundreds of millions of pounds in fines imposed on one-person businesses for not doing their bit to support Britain's thriving brass platemaking industry

          Comment


            #6
            What's coming soon is this - free data from the Companies House will be used by councils to locate locally registered businesses in residential areas that don't pay business rates...

            Sounds like Plan B to start new cost efficient mail forwarding service

            Comment


              #7
              Business rates are not applicable if you are working from home:

              https://www.gov.uk/introduction-to-b...orking-at-home

              OP, is your registered office at home or at your accountant's? When you say "leasehold", do you mean that you rent or the body corporate of the leasehold on a property that you own?

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by meridian View Post
                Business rates are not applicable if you are working from home:
                "You don’t usually have to pay business rates for home-based businesses if you:"

                Councils need extra revenues, they will argue why won't ebay sellers not pay business rates tax the same way the High Streets shops do?

                Comment


                  #9
                  Hi

                  its not a question of business rates its more about a breach of residential lease. I own the property under a lease - flat. I use the home address for my contractor address that's all and the Landlord is suggesting its not now purely residential which it absolutely is.
                  Not aware on any contractor erecting plaques!!
                  thanks









                  Originally posted by Ridds13 View Post
                  Hi

                  has anyone had any challenge from their Leasehold management co in having registered their Ltd Co at their home address? I reside in a Leasehold apartment and carry on no business activity other than receiving my Ltd company mail at my home address.

                  I am being accused of breaching the "single residential dwelling condition" within the lease!

                  My lawyer believes there is no case to answer but I am interested if anyone else in the Contractor Ltd Co world has faced this.

                  PR

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by Ridds13 View Post
                    Not aware on any contractor erecting plaques!!


                    You are not a real contractor if you don't have a nice plaque with your name on it!

                    Comment

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