Originally posted by TheCyclingProgrammer
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Did I say if you have clear paperwork it is technically ok? Yeah. Will it make HMRC suspicious? Yeah. I have a built-in radar for a few contributors on here that when I see their name makes me take extra notice of what they say, and you are one of them, but I don't think this was your finest intervention.
And your "owed a supplier money" analogy is very shaky.
First, I wouldn't pay a lump sum unless I got a statement showing it, so that I could give a reference to the statement in the payment. Otherwise, I'd want each invoice to be referred in the payment, to make sure it gets credited properly to my account. I DON'T want to unnecessarily trust the competence of their bookkeeping and then have hassles getting it sorted.
But second, a dividend is not "owed" to a supplier. Salary/stipend are paid, owed, to suppliers of labour. But dividends are paid to owners of the company. And the only reason we get favourable tax treatment is because those are very different things. It is a coincidence of many of our companies that the suppliers of labour are also the shareholders, but our legal and tax status keeps them sharply distinct. And it is far cleaner and also better for our mindset to keep those distinctions in our practices.
Finally, a better analogy. A week or two ago someone was asking about paying business expenses on his personal credit card and having his business pay the card, then reimbursing the business with personal funds for any personal items. The answer there was very similar to this -- yes, you can do that if your record-keeping is perfect, but it's messy, it isn't normal business practice for businesses to pay personal credit cards, and it would be far cleaner, more business-like, and less suspicious-looking to have your company reimburse you for business expenses, and pay the credit card from your personal account.
I'd say this question is very comparable to that one. Yeah, you can do it if you are very careful about paperwork, but it is messy and not good business practice.
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