If there are no staff or all staff are ineligible for automatic enrolment, then the organisation would not need to set up a pension scheme or complete a declaration of compliance.
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Reply to: Auto Enrolment Exeptions
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Previously on "Auto Enrolment Exeptions"
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Originally posted by sal View PostThe only downside i can think of, of switching your spouse from secretary to director is the mandatory Self-assessment for director, AFAIK secretaries don't have to submit.
If she's also a shareholder though she'll probably need to do one anyway thanks to the dividend tax changes (unless her share is quite small).
If you use FreeAgent, it can submit self assessments for any director so it really shouldn't be more than a 10 minute job.
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Originally posted by sal View PostThe only downside i can think of, of switching your spouse from secretary to director is the mandatory Self-assessment for director, AFAIK secretaries don't have to submit.
1) there is no law that says directors have to do self assessments...it's just (bad) HMRC interpretation of the law.
2) especially with the new "dividend tax", lots of secondary shareholders are going to have to start doing tax returns where they didn't before (irrespective of any office holder position). Previously they could have £8k salary and £30k divis and suffer no personal tax, now they need just ~£8k divis with that same salary to suffer personal tax.
More generally, quite a few of our clients have recently "promoted" their spouses/similar. Yes there's some extra legal responsibilities on them in case things go bad, but it potentially gets the company out of auto enrolment, and also can have some knock on benefits, eg things like qualifying for entrepreneurs relief upon possible future windup, where a "normal employee" might fail.
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The only downside i can think of, of switching your spouse from secretary to director is the mandatory Self-assessment for director, AFAIK secretaries don't have to submit.
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No I don't think so. I just appointed mine as a director, didn't bother resigning her as company secretary so she's both.
Yes there is joint legal responsibility. IR35 doesn't come into it I don't think as that's a personal taxation matter.
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Originally posted by TheCyclingProgrammer View PostI was planning to make my wife a director anyway and I might get that done sooner rather than later.
Are there any downsides or surprises when adding someone as a director? All I can think of is joint legal responsibility in the event of some situation such as HMRC ever being unhappy with tax arrangements, heaven forbid (IR35 audits and all that).
I want to name my wife as director (she's currently secretary) so I can state that all staff are directors with no contract of employment and are thus exempt from pension autoenrolment. I just want to make sure there isn't some side effect I haven't thought of, like tax status or something.
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Originally posted by Jessica@WhiteFieldTax View Posthelps you. If your minutes merely documented a decision to engage help on particular terms for particular reasons then there is at least enough uncertainty around implied contract of employment to trigger the last limb.
OTOH there's reason not to appoint her as director as far as I can see and if I do then even if there's an implied contract there wouldn't be any requirement at all.
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You may find
However, if there is no written contract of employment, or other evidence of an intention to create an employer/worker relationship between the company and a director or directors, we will not seek to argue that an implied contract of employment exists.
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So they've finally clarified that these special rules do *not* apply to company secretaries too.
So for those of us whose spouse/partner is company secretary and also does basic admin duties and is paid a salary, its possible they could be classed as a worker if there is an employment contract in place:
For example, a company secretary's contract might cover additional administrative services that they provide to the company, but not their official duties as company secretary. In this situation, the office-holder is classed as a worker, but only their income under the employment contract is counted for automatic enrolment purposes.
* if the husband or wife who holds a recognised office such as company secretary, does not have a contract of employment - and only performs the official duties of that office (such as submitting the annual return to Companies House) - they are exempt from automatic enrolment
* if the husband or wife who is company secretary has a contract of employment, they would not be exempt even if the contract only applies to additional work that they do over and above their official responsibilitiesLast edited by TheCyclingProgrammer; 13 January 2017, 15:34.
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Auto Enrolment Exeptions
The Pensions Regulator has put a page up on exemptions for small co directors from Auto Enrolment.
Worth a read
Director exemptions from automatic enrolment | The Pensions RegulatorTags: None
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