Originally posted by runandbecome
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"You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR -
Originally posted by eek View Post[
Pensions
If you are contributing large amounts into a pension your pension contributions will be from your post salary income not direct from your company. That means that all contributions are going to be 15-25% smaller due to National Insurance being deducted prior to it being paid into your pension. If you pay a lot into a pension you need to seriously decide on whether it would be better to use an umbrella company and pay into your pension using Salary Sacrifice.
You will also have to use self assessment to reclaim the higher rate income tax proportion of any pension contributions see https://www.aegon.co.uk/support/faq/...ef-pp-faq.html for some detailsComment
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This came out of my OH's agency in response to another contractors questions:
The proposed legislation is still at the consultation stage so until we receive formal guidance we are unable to advise. You will not be the only contractor in this position in regards to payment for March work come April. <note: they won't bring forward the payment date from the 10th April>
Until x have confirmed and <agency> has stated their stance I cannot make these amendments. We will amend appropriately once confirmation has been received but we are unable to make the amendment right now
The client will receive communication from ourselves in relation to IR35 changes and the outcome for their contractors.
I appreciate your concern but we will do all we can to ensure your needs are suitable met after the consultation period.
So basically the 9 contactors (all from the same agency) are handing in their notice a month early (contracts run to end March) to ensure they don't get caught with a post 6th April payment.
Agency (and one of the largest in the UK) seems to:
a: have no plan
b: leaving it to each local office
Unreal.Comment
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Originally posted by NHS1979 View PostThis is the most helpful thread I've found on all of this so, firstly, thank you for all your time spent giving info.
I am an NHS Manager normally working as a contractor/interim with the NHS via an agency (so my contract is with the agency, who in turn have one with the NHS). At present this works well and I move around depending on where the work is. Typical day rate would be £450 and, leaving aside the VAT, I get this into the company account, leave aside the Corporation Tax, and pay myself minimum salary and rest in dividends (with the latter also taxed after a threshold).
My NHS end-client is, as you'd expect, bemused by all this and no doubt will employ a blanket decision like TfL.
I know you are going to post more information, but for now my only question is re corporation tax. If I carry on post-March '17 with a new contract with slicker wording from the agency, my understanding is that NI and PAYE taxes are collected and I receive the net of this into the company account. This would now be regarded as 'salary' and so payable directly into my personal bank account (no more dividends or dividend taxes). But what about the corporation tax? If I am still getting this 'salary' via the ltd company, will the CT still be due too? 20% is massive."Being nice costs nothing and sometimes gets you extra bacon" - Pondlife.Comment
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Originally posted by DaveB View PostNo, you're CT bill will be £0 (assuming the company has no other form of income). CT is charged on profits after costs. Salary is a cost and is deducted from profits before CT is calculated. Since the entire income to the company is paid out in salary there are no profits to be taxed and no CT to pay.
For some of us zero corp tax could be not too bad compared to the current situation.
For people like me who don't travel too much, I spend a bit on eqpt.
I am trying to find somewhere where I can make calculations as to what I may recieve if the new rules apply.
Currently £360 a day
Take home between me and wife with Salary Dividends is about £5500
My Corp tax bill last year was about £15k so I am trying to calculate difference.
Then the other question is what becomes of the company, do you stop billing through that and just get an umbrella?Comment
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Originally posted by runandbecome View PostThis is what I was trying to work out.
For some of us zero corp tax could be not too bad compared to the current situation.
For people like me who don't travel too much, I spend a bit on eqpt.
I am trying to find somewhere where I can make calculations as to what I may recieve if the new rules apply.
Currently £360 a day
Take home between me and wife with Salary Dividends is about £5500
My Corp tax bill last year was about £15k so I am trying to calculate difference.
Then the other question is what becomes of the company, do you stop billing through that and just get an umbrella?"I can put any old tat in my sig, put quotes around it and attribute to someone of whom I've heard, to make it sound true."
- Voltaire/Benjamin Franklin/Anne Frank...Comment
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Originally posted by teapot418 View PostProbably should point out that the treatment of pension contributions is a best guess at this stage.
Now if a financial advisor is willing to give me advice that differs from the advice I've already received I'm happy to change it but until then I will leave it as it ismerely at clientco for the entertainmentComment
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Originally posted by b r View PostThis came out of my OH's agency in response to another contractors questions:
The proposed legislation is still at the consultation stage so until we receive formal guidance we are unable to advise. You will not be the only contractor in this position in regards to payment for March work come April. <note: they won't bring forward the payment date from the 10th April>
Until x have confirmed and <agency> has stated their stance I cannot make these amendments. We will amend appropriately once confirmation has been received but we are unable to make the amendment right now
The client will receive communication from ourselves in relation to IR35 changes and the outcome for their contractors.
I appreciate your concern but we will do all we can to ensure your needs are suitable met after the consultation period.
So basically the 9 contactors (all from the same agency) are handing in their notice a month early (contracts run to end March) to ensure they don't get caught with a post 6th April payment.
Agency (and one of the largest in the UK) seems to:
a: have no plan
b: leaving it to each local office
Unreal.
This close to the event though, the amount of pennies that haven't dropped across clients, agencies and contractors is simply stunning.
We are committed to supporting PSC's both inside of IR35 and those who are genuinely able to operate outside. We've had quite a proactive approach to this change and have picked up more business than we've lost from contractors and clients, simply because we have a reasonable understanding and are not sticking our heads in the sand.Comment
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Originally posted by Andy Hallett View PostTo be fair there will be differing levels of knowledge at all agencies and end clients. Consultants won't always know the detail
This close to the event though, the amount of pennies that haven't dropped across clients, agencies and contractors is simply stunning.
We are committed to supporting PSC's both inside of IR35 and those who are genuinely able to operate outside. We've had quite a proactive approach to this change and have picked up more business than we've lost from contractors and clients, simply because we have a reasonable understanding and are not sticking our heads in the sand.
By the calculation if I am forced to go umbrella I'll be around £1200 worse off a month.
I think the wife and I may then classify in Theresa Mays JAM category.
Glad you are keeping abreast of this Andy I think you and your agency may be one of the very few that will be able to give decent advice as many others are ignoring the situation.Comment
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Originally posted by DaveB View PostNo, your (strictly your ltd co.'s) CT bill will be £0 (assuming the company has no other form of income). CT is charged on profits after costs. Salary is a cost and is deducted from profits before CT is calculated. Since the entire income to the company is paid out in salary there are no profits to be taxed and no CT to pay.Comment
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