Originally posted by djf
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IR35 PS - So anyone had the discussion yet?
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The payer is responsible for Employer NICs. Where there is an agency involved, this will be the agent. So the agent will either need to renegotiate contracts with the PS to cover the NICs, or renegotiate contract with the contractor to reduce the rate. -
"They take off £1400 tax and the £400 employee NICs and pay your company £5400 .... and then in addition the government dept pays £700 employers NIC."
Pay your company?Comment
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Correct.Originally posted by teapot418 View PostThe payer is responsible for Employer NICs. Where there is an agency involved, this will be the agent. So the agent will either need to renegotiate contracts with the PS to cover the NICs, or renegotiate contract with the contractor to reduce the rate.Comment
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They've all decided its better to keep the contract and see how it goes. Not in my book.Originally posted by teapot418 View PostHe is - but he needs to stop faffing and vote with his feet. If he can persuade his colleagues to do the same, all the better.Rhyddid i lofnod psychocandy!!!!Comment
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But my agency who currently have under 10% margin are not going to suddenly pay all this tax and NI for the fun of it.Originally posted by Andy Hallett View PostThe 'payer', in this example the agency, takes the hit for PAYE and the NICs.
I was discussing this today, agents need to understand who they are supplying and asking the question otherwise they are in the tulip when the music stops.Rhyddid i lofnod psychocandy!!!!Comment
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Which is going to be great fun to watch when an agency realises they've got to pay 12% employers NI out of their 10% margin!Originally posted by teapot418 View PostThe payer is responsible for Employer NICs. Where there is an agency involved, this will be the agent. So the agent will either need to renegotiate contracts with the PS to cover the NICs, or renegotiate contract with the contractor to reduce the rate.Rhyddid i lofnod psychocandy!!!!Comment
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Or, rather more likely they take their fees from the client, pay off the ErNICs then give you your margin of the balance...Originally posted by psychocandy View PostWhich is going to be great fun to watch when an agency realises they've got to pay 12% employers NI out of their 10% margin!
You get a percentage of their income, not the other way round. However agencies already offer two rates to clients to cover umbrella users' NIC overheads, no reason they won't simply switch to the higher rate fee.Blog? What blog...?
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I'm just starting to have these discussions at the moment (been hassling them for a while now). I think that a lot of agencies will probably have a liability clause in their contract to pass that cost onto the contractor in some way.Originally posted by psychocandy View PostWhich is going to be great fun to watch when an agency realises they've got to pay 12% employers NI out of their 10% margin!Comment
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They wont.Originally posted by psychocandy View PostWhich is going to be great fun to watch when an agency realises they've got to pay 12% employers NI out of their 10% margin!
They'll just take it out of the contractors day rate.
My agency is Reed and their proposal was that if i was deemed inside IR35 that i go "on payroll" with them and
(a) i'd be on a lower day rate (before PAYE tax) as they would keep a percentage in a "kitty" to pay my 20 days holiday per year. What I didnt use i'd get paid to me when the contract ended - just like if you were an FTE and getting paid owed holiday days when you were leaving
(b) their employer NI would come out of my day rate too.

I think thats going to be the standard proposal from agencies when the dust settles. Whether or not there an uplift in rates to offset, i dont know.
Also, from what i am hearing, the PS client i am with are going to adopt an approach similar to TFL.Last edited by daemon; 5 February 2017, 18:47.Comment
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