Originally posted by cojak
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Every single IT project manager at a bank ever
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Originally posted by mallisarealperson View Post
£600 per day is my dream, not reality.
I started back in 2005.I am what I drink, and I'm a bitter manComment
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Originally posted by Whorty View Post
You're been contracting longer than me, and neither of us has a rate of £600 pd ... but only one of us has this as a dream
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Originally posted by vetran View Post
IR35 results in personal taxation they would just make you personally bankrupt or garner your personal accounts.
All these court cases are HRMC vs Ltd Company for a reason. It is the company that is being taken to court not the director.
HMRC can only go after the directors for payment if there was negligence or fraud by them. Hard to prove and unlikely in an IR35 case.
This is one of the reason they have switched to making client companies liable, clients will actually have money to pay the debt if HMRC beats the client in court.Last edited by Fraidycat; 16 June 2021, 15:18.Comment
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Originally posted by Fraidycat View Post
They may bankrupt your ltd company if it doesn't have the money to pay the deemed IR35 payments.
You know all these court cases are HRMC vs Ltd Company for a reason.
But HMRC can only go after the directors for payment if there was negligence or fraud by them. Hard to prove and unlikely in an IR35 case.
This is one of the reason they have switched to making client companies liable, clients will actually have money to pay the debt.Comment
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Unless you've been engaged in fraudulent behavior (high bar), they will struggle to pierce the corporate veil and transfer a debt from the company to a director, but it's possible if you had no contract reviews and made no plausible assessment of IR35 risk and it wasn't remotely a borderline case. I don't think we're aware of any examples of that succeeding. That is to say, the IR35 liability is always with YourCo in the first instance, assuming that was your intermediary.Comment
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Originally posted by jamesbrown View PostUnless you've been engaged in fraudulent behavior (high bar), they will struggle to pierce the corporate veil and transfer a debt from the company to a director, but it's possible if you had no contract reviews and made no plausible assessment of IR35 risk and it wasn't remotely a borderline case. I don't think we're aware of any examples of that succeeding. That is to say, the IR35 liability is always with YourCo in the first instance, assuming that was your intermediary.Comment
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Originally posted by cannon999 View Post
I am not sure I understand this. What taxes exactly are we talking about here? So let's say IR35 case is lost, which means that the revenue previously treated as revenue is now a salary. That salary has been paid out as dividends. What tax is HMRC claiming back here? Employer NI? Employee PAYE? If the latter then isn't that on the individual?
Yes, it is levied on the individual, but YourCo is responsible (and liable) for applying the PAYE and NICs regulations correctly and YourCo would be pursued under the relevant PAYE and NICs regulations. More here - a bit old now, but still relevant:
https://www.whitefieldtax.co.uk/ir35...-a-individual/
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Originally posted by jamesbrown View Post
As a minimum, all taxes that would've been paid, had the money been correctly treated as an IR35 deemed payment. So, yes, PAYE plus both sets of NICs. There may be penalties too.
Yes, it is levied on the individual, but YourCo is responsible (and liable) for applying the PAYE and NICs regulations correctly and YourCo would be pursued under the relevant PAYE and NICs regulations. More here - a bit old now, but still relevant:
https://www.whitefieldtax.co.uk/ir35...-a-individual/?
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Originally posted by jamesbrown View Post
As a minimum, all taxes that would've been paid, had the money been correctly treated as an IR35 deemed payment. So, yes, PAYE plus both sets of NICs. There may be penalties too.
Yes, it is levied on the individual, but YourCo is responsible (and liable) for applying the PAYE and NICs regulations correctly and YourCo would be pursued under the relevant PAYE and NICs regulations. More here - a bit old now, but still relevant:
https://www.whitefieldtax.co.uk/ir35...-a-individual/Comment
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