Originally posted by DeludedKitten
View Post
- Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
- Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!
Collapse
You are not logged in or you do not have permission to access this page. This could be due to one of several reasons:
- You are not logged in. If you are already registered, fill in the form below to log in, or follow the "Sign Up" link to register a new account.
- You may not have sufficient privileges to access this page. Are you trying to edit someone else's post, access administrative features or some other privileged system?
- If you are trying to post, the administrator may have disabled your account, or it may be awaiting activation.
Logging in...
Previously on "Do those of you with shared household finances give shares to your spouse?"
Collapse
-
-
Originally posted by DeludedKitten View PostAt the risk of assuming another's mantle and suggesting to search the forum, have you considered searching the forum?
A quick search finds this one from 2016, for example - https://www.contractoruk.com/forums/...to-missus.html
Might be worth asking the OP what they decided in the end.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by vwdan View PostMy wife has a 20% shareholding and has done from day one. My understanding was that HMRC had already lost that battle when it came to married couples, and I felt my wife deserved something for putting up with the time I was piling into starting a business and also fronting the capital which let me leave my permie job.
She was never an employee until she gave up work - I know it's not completely whiter than white, but the pay is very low and I'm lucky enough that she's a management accountant by trade so I can genuinely make the case that she assists with the day to day running, book keeeping etc.
Leave a comment:
-
My wife has a 20% shareholding and has done from day one. My understanding was that HMRC had already lost that battle when it came to married couples, and I felt my wife deserved something for putting up with the time I was piling into starting a business and also fronting the capital which let me leave my permie job.
She was never an employee until she gave up work - I know it's not completely whiter than white, but the pay is very low and I'm lucky enough that she's a management accountant by trade so I can genuinely make the case that she assists with the day to day running, book keeeping etc.
Leave a comment:
-
At the risk of assuming another's mantle and suggesting to search the forum, have you considered searching the forum?
A quick search finds this one from 2016, for example - https://www.contractoruk.com/forums/...to-missus.html
Might be worth asking the OP what they decided in the end.
Leave a comment:
-
WordIsBond has a very different set up to us so has a business reason for using them. Lemme get the link.
https://www.contractoruk.com/forums/...st2603698.html
And some examples here.
Company Law Club // Alphabet shares
Leave a comment:
-
You seem a little obsessed with my "morally upright IFA". I'm not sure why. I said that to make it clear this is not some sleazy type who typically entices their clients into dodgy loopholes that are yet to be closed, only well-established tried and tested options. e.g. I cannot imagine they'd advise people in the past to go the BN66 route, etc. I was rather surprised a fairly straight-laced, conservative advisor would be so confident this was the way to go, is all. Previously I'd ruled it out.
Out of interest, what is the "correct" use of alphabet shares?
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by Maslins View PostI was never great at quoting tax legislation, but if you can be bothered, have a detailed read over the outcome of the Arctic Systems case. I believe one of the things that was critical was that they had the same share class. Therefore there couldn't really be an argument that her shares were just a right to income.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by Maslins View PostThanks for clarifying. I was wondering whether it was leak and potato or chicken and mushroom.
I was never great at quoting tax legislation, but if you can be bothered, have a detailed read over the outcome of the Arctic Systems case. I believe one of the things that was critical was that they had the same share class. Therefore there couldn't really be an argument that her shares were just a right to income.
Where you have different share classes, it adds weight to the argument that the spouse's shares are inferior in some way. Indeed I think QDOS's tax related insurance basically requires you to confirm that whilst you can have a spouse owning some shares, the rights are the same and dividends paid in line with shareholding, with no dividend waivers.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by Iliketax View PostJust to be clear, there is no actual soup involved.
I was never great at quoting tax legislation, but if you can be bothered, have a detailed read over the outcome of the Arctic Systems case. I believe one of the things that was critical was that they had the same share class. Therefore there couldn't really be an argument that her shares were just a right to income.
Where you have different share classes, it adds weight to the argument that the spouse's shares are inferior in some way. Indeed I think QDOS's tax related insurance basically requires you to confirm that whilst you can have a spouse owning some shares, the rights are the same and dividends paid in line with shareholding, with no dividend waivers.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by d000hg View PostYou mention employees here. I'm on a salary but isn't it a key point that many of us are directors but NOT employees?
Originally posted by d000hg View PostSo they talk about using alphabet shares to pay all employees via dividends, to avoid salary=>income tax. But my wife isn't an employee or involved in the running of the company.
Originally posted by d000hg View PostFurther, they talk about this "soup" when many classes of share are used so everyone gets their own share class. I'm talking about one additional share class, specifically for my spouse
Originally posted by d000hg View Postas I've said I thought HMRC made special dispensation/understanding for financial arrangements between husband/wife?
Originally posted by d000hg View PostSo I'm struggling to see this is the case I am discussing?
A further query - why is it absolutely fine if I gift my wife some class A shares but potentially sticky for class B?
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by Iliketax View PostDid your morally upright IFA mention HMRC's guidance on this: ERSM60030 - Employment Related Securities Manual - HMRC internal manual - GOV.UK
What HMRC says is that when you declare a dividend the value of the shares goes up. So you as the employee, not your spouse, will pay income tax on that increase in value. Then your spouse will pay tax on the dividend. So that's two lot of tax on the same thing. Now it no one is paying tax, who cares. If you were both to pay the highest rates, that's 83.1%. You'll be somewhere in between.
Now your morally upright IFA might well be right that HMRC might lose in court. They might say that all the "things done" are done for "genuine commercial purposes" (which is defined not to include anything done as part of a scheme or arrangement the main purpose (or one of the main purposes) of which is the avoidance of tax or national insurance contributions). But equally your morally upright IFA may not know about tax. You could ask them? Maybe ask them how Chapter 3B of Part 7 ITEPA 2003 might apply if the revenue got a bee in their bonnet?
Let's look at that page you linked (thanks by the way):
Example 3: alphabet soup
A company uses special classes of shares to pay all or most of employees’ wages as dividends. Each employee will have their own class of shares so different dividends can be paid to each. The shares have no rights other than that the employer can award dividends at his discretion.
Each dividend is acting as if it were a cash bonus specific to the employee. Each time the dividend is voted the value of the share will rise and each time the dividend is paid, the value will fall again. The accumulated rises for the year will be artificial increases in value of the shares caught by Chapter 3B - the legislation disregards the falls in value.
If there is a large number of employees the classes of shares may be designated A, B, C, etc. hence the generic description “alphabet soup”.
Further, they talk about this "soup" when many classes of share are used so everyone gets their own share class. I'm talking about one additional share class, specifically for my spouse - as I've said I thought HMRC made special dispensation/understanding for financial arrangements between husband/wife?
So I'm struggling to see this is the case I am discussing?
A further query - why is it absolutely fine if I gift my wife some class A shares but potentially sticky for class B? What is the distinction legally/HMRC-wise?
Obviously the limitation with gifting class A is that the ratio of dividends is fixed. Now presumably spouses can each year re-gift shares to obtain they ratio they want but that seems substantially more artificial, personally. I've no idea if people do that?
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by d000hg View PostI've looked into alphabet shares before but was put off as they seemed a little dodgy.
<snip>
Clearly I cannot simply use faux employment to pay my wife for nothing.
My setup is:
I'm sole director
Me/Spouse 50% shareholders (no alphabet nonsense) = equal dividends
I take a salary
Spouse doesn't get a salary, as they are not employed by the Ltd
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by d000hg View PostI was most surprised that my well-respected, morally upright IFA recommended issuing her class B shares with the advice "HMRC won't like it but married couples have the right to arrange their income efficiently, and if they took you to court they would lose".
Example 3: alphabet soup
A company uses special classes of shares to pay all or most of employees’ wages as dividends. Each employee will have their own class of shares so different dividends can be paid to each. The shares have no rights other than that the employer can award dividends at his discretion.
Each dividend is acting as if it were a cash bonus specific to the employee. Each time the dividend is voted the value of the share will rise and each time the dividend is paid, the value will fall again. The accumulated rises for the year will be artificial increases in value of the shares caught by Chapter 3B - the legislation disregards the falls in value.
If there is a large number of employees the classes of shares may be designated A, B, C, etc. hence the generic description “alphabet soup”.
Now your morally upright IFA might well be right that HMRC might lose in court. They might say that all the "things done" are done for "genuine commercial purposes" (which is defined not to include anything done as part of a scheme or arrangement the main purpose (or one of the main purposes) of which is the avoidance of tax or national insurance contributions). But equally your morally upright IFA may not know about tax. You could ask them? Maybe ask them how Chapter 3B of Part 7 ITEPA 2003 might apply if the revenue got a bee in their bonnet?
And just to be clear:
1. This has absolutely noting to do with the settlements legislation.
2. If all of the shares are the same class then it doesn't apply.
And just to be unclear, you may lose ER relief with alphabet shares. The legislation in the current Finance Bill is pants, but the obvious wording is that relief is lost. HMRC are trying to squint at it to see if it is ok. My guess is that this is something that will get tweaked at the Report Stage but no one will know for sure in the next few weeks.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by Maslins View PostWould be fine with it except for the alphabet shares bit. I think one thing that was critical in Arctic Systems case was husband and wife had the same shares, so legally she had just as much power as he did. With A and B shares, you're making a clear distinction, so we recommend against them (bla bla except where genuine commercial reason yadda yadda).
My spouse is not a director but holds 50% shares.
Leave a comment:
- Home
- News & Features
- First Timers
- IR35 / S660 / BN66
- Employee Benefit Trusts
- Agency Workers Regulations
- MSC Legislation
- Limited Companies
- Dividends
- Umbrella Company
- VAT / Flat Rate VAT
- Job News & Guides
- Money News & Guides
- Guide to Contracts
- Successful Contracting
- Contracting Overseas
- Contractor Calculators
- MVL
- Contractor Expenses
Advertisers
Contractor Services
CUK News
- Labour’s plan to regulate umbrella companies: a closer look Yesterday 09:24
- When HMRC misses an FTT deadline but still wins another CJRS case Nov 20 09:20
- How 15% employer NICs will sting the umbrella company market Nov 19 09:16
- Contracting Awards 2024 hails 19 firms as best of the best Nov 18 09:13
- How to answer at interview, ‘What’s your greatest weakness?’ Nov 14 09:59
- Business Asset Disposal Relief changes in April 2025: Q&A Nov 13 09:37
- How debt transfer rules will hit umbrella companies in 2026 Nov 12 09:28
- IT contractor demand floundering despite Autumn Budget 2024 Nov 11 09:30
- An IR35 bill of £19m for National Resources Wales may be just the tip of its iceberg Nov 7 09:20
- Micro-entity accounts: Overview, and how to file with HMRC Nov 6 09:27
Leave a comment: