Originally posted by Hobosapien
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The Official 2018 Budget DOOM thread
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Originally posted by pjt View PostFrom what I've seen the agents are already fully aware and making ng it clear to clients the cost inside ir35 will bring. Its the clients who have no idea about ir35.Comment
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Originally posted by Unix View PostSame here, I'm deemed outside by the client, in a long contract that will likely go on for years.
It's actually better this way as all liability falls to the client, not the contractor, bring it on for the private sector.
If you are required to purchase Liability insurance by the client you are defacto outside IR35. If they want to deem you inside you are not required to buy insurance which exposes the client.
Rest 5% will also be deemed inside ir35 by hmrc when investigated,
hmrc make the rulesComment
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Originally posted by Andy2 View Post95% of bums on seat contractors are inside ir35, thats a fact
Rest 5% will also be deemed inside ir35 by hmrc when investigated,
hmrc make the rulesComment
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Originally posted by Andy2 View Post95% of bums on seat contractors are inside ir35, thats a fact
Rest 5% will also be deemed inside ir35 by hmrc when investigated,
hmrc make the rulesComment
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As usual a strange and contrived load of rules from the HMRC. Only really here in the UK could we be contemplating such a mess. I'd imagine some agencies will be looking of their shoulders as contractors just pack it in. If there's no benefit contracting but all of the risk then nobody is going to do it.
What if I'm 1/2 way through my contract and my client becomes a medium business? With Brexit also in the air, I wouldn't be surprised if a good number of contractors head overseas.Comment
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Originally posted by TheScheduler View PostAs usual a strange and contrived load of rules from the HMRC. Only really here in the UK could we be contemplating such a mess. I'd imagine some agencies will be looking of their shoulders as contractors just pack it in. If there's no benefit contracting but all of the risk then nobody is going to do it.
What if I'm 1/2 way through my contract and my client becomes a medium business? With Brexit also in the air, I wouldn't be surprised if a good number of contractors head overseas.Comment
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Originally posted by genius View PostThe country is lucky to have us! We are so valuable and extremely qualified, if anything we don't get paid enough! Am I right guys?!Maybe tomorrow, I'll want to settle down. Until tomorrow, I'll just keep moving on.Comment
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The Way Forward?
I've been watching this thread with interest and was just wondering if anyone else is thinking the same as me?
Foot to the metal for the next 18 months and then take the entrepreneur's relief on what I've managed to accrue in my Ltd co. account.
I mean, if we are being forced to go through a brolly (and, who knows, we don't know how this will pan out) we will no longer have use for our Ltds? Or are we going to keep them for those rarer than hen's teeth gigs that have been declared outside IR35 with all the attendant admin and accountant's fees to keep them running?
Contingencies, contingencies.....Comment
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...and also - what about the accountants?
Surely they're going to be hit by all these PSCs winding up?
I'd have thought they'd have had enough collective clout to have lobbied the govt to prevent this messComment
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