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Reply to: Comparing inside/outside rates?
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Previously on "Comparing inside/outside rates?"
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Originally posted by edison View Post
I thought the corporation tax rate is on a sliding scale between £50k and £250k? I used an online calculator (might have been on the .GOV site) which suggested my true CT rate would be around 23.5%.
So 22% = £50,000 at 19% + £y,000 at 26.5%
And I link to someone who you may trust more than me given that tax is how they make their money
https://www.whitefieldtax.co.uk/help...n-tax-changes/Last edited by eek; 21 April 2023, 13:25.
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Originally posted by edison View Post
I thought the corporation tax rate is on a sliding scale between £50k and £250k? I used an online calculator (might have been on the .GOV site) which suggested my true CT rate would be around 23.5%.Last edited by BlueSharp; 21 April 2023, 13:08.
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Originally posted by eek View Postso someone was asking a question to me and I don't have time to fully answer it but I do have 1 additional fact
For every penny above £50,270 to £100,000
Outside IR35
£1 in profit results in £0.735 after Corporation tax (at the 26.5% band)
£1 paid as a dividend will give you £0.6625 (after dividend tax of 33.75%)
So £1 in profit gives you a dividend of 1*0.735*0.6625= 48.7p
Reversing that £1 take home pay will require the company to make £2.05 in profit
Inside IR35
£1 in pay results in £0.58 after tax (40%) and additional employee NI (2%)
£1 agency fee results in a £0.875 of pay (after employer NI and apprenticeship levy deductions of 14.3%.
So £1 agency fee results in take home pay of £0.5075
Reversing that £1 take home pay requires an agency fee of £1.97
So once we get above £50,000a year unless you have expenses or wish to keep money for a future day being inside is a better deal...
Got to say I'm really surprised no-one has actually noticed / mentioned this outright...
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Originally posted by northernladuk View Post
I think that's because we are probably all tired of bouncing this one around and never getting an answer so just don't bother
I only did the above because it was more interesting than the task I need to do.
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Originally posted by eek View PostGot to say I'm really surprised no-one has actually noticed / mentioned this outright...
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Second calculation - for the bit to £50,270
Via umbrella
Salary of £50,270 gives you a take home of £38,206 from https://www.thesalarycalculator.co.uk/salary.php
£50,270 of salary will require an extra £5756.46 to cover the Employer NI and £250 to cover the apprenticeship levy.
So £56275+umbrella fee (say £1200) will give you a take home of £38,206
Via limited company
Your salary is £12,570
Dividend £37,700.
Dividend tax 8.75% after the first £1000
so you actual take home is £34488.75+£12,570= £48,058 significantly higher
however you also need to factor in Corporation tax and £37,700 of dividends requires £47,125 of profit.
You also need to add £480 in Employer NI
So £50,270 of salary + dividends requires £12570+£47125+£480= £60,175.
Now given getting to £50,270 in dividends requires £3900 more in agency fees than we have in the umbrella calculation it's worth adding that back into the equation.
And that £3900 agency fee to an umbrella is £1979.25 in take home pay
So keeping agency fees across an inside and outside contract the same at £60,175
working inside IR35 will give you £40,185.
working outside will give you £48,058
but that advantage slowly disappears once you start paying dividends beyond £50,270 or where an inside IR35 contract is paying more than an outside one.
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so someone was asking a question to me and I don't have time to fully answer it but I do have 1 additional fact
For every penny above £50,270 to £100,000
Outside IR35
£1 in profit results in £0.735 after Corporation tax (at the 26.5% band)
£1 paid as a dividend will give you £0.6625 (after dividend tax of 33.75%)
So £1 in profit gives you a dividend of 1*0.735*0.6625= 48.7p
Reversing that £1 take home pay will require the company to make £2.05 in profit
Inside IR35
£1 in pay results in £0.58 after tax (40%) and additional employee NI (2%)
£1 agency fee results in a £0.875 of pay (after employer NI and apprenticeship levy deductions of 14.3%.
So £1 agency fee results in take home pay of £0.5075
Reversing that £1 take home pay requires an agency fee of £1.97
So once we get above £50,000a year unless you have expenses or wish to keep money for a future day being inside is a better deal...
Got to say I'm really surprised no-one has actually noticed / mentioned this outright...Last edited by eek; 21 April 2023, 10:30.
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Originally posted by b0redom View PostThis is too hard to answer without more information - are you income shifting with your spouse? What are your expenses (if any). Do you still have your Ltd and associated accountancy fees or is this a new setup? How long is the contract length etc.
Wild stab in the dark suggests that ~ £600 outside is ~ £750 outside.
I just took my 600 and added 13 % to cover inflation as that 600 goes back to Jan 2021 .. let's see how that goes.
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Originally posted by eek View Post
That makes no sense - so I assume you mean £600 outside ~ £750 inside.
I think it really depends on the travel expenses required - because if none are required it's very possible to argue that given the new tax rules the only difference is employer NI at 14.3%
so £750 inside is £660 or so outside and I would personally take the £750 as it allows me more to go into the pension via salary sacrifice.
You would probably need travel costs or another £30/50 a day so ~£700 to make the outside contract worthwhile.
It's not just NI though, it's also semi-trivial expenses - of the inside contracts I've worked, they've generally wanted me to still provide my own phone, laptop etc. Where I could expense that outside, I obviously can't inside. You also get to pay the umbrella margin, and usually an apprenticeship levy whilst inside. It's also pretty rare that you'll have a 100% remote contract. You generally need to go into the office at least a couple of times to pick up stuff and then drop it off at the end of a contract and/or a meeting. You also can't share dividends with your spouse inside IR35.
Like I say it's too hard to give an accurate answer without knowing the ins and outs of the OP's circumstances.
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Originally posted by fiisch View PostNot sure if anyone's said this already, but it's not a straightforward comparison....
As a Business Analyst, I spreadsheeted this to death to try and answer - I can only speak for personal circumstances, but assuming c. £1k/month expenditure (mainly travel), and having a wife who would willingly collect dividends for me and two young children meaning an inside rate loses me Child Benefit & Tax Free Childcare, I came to the conclusion that of two roles I was considering, £600 p/d outside was preferable to the £750 p/d inside role, but the difference was marginal.
Another point to add is if you're expenditure is low and you can afford to leave a decent chunk in ltd., this adds to the argument of being outside imho.
Just an opinion DYOR, your results may vary etc TTFN WDFDIK etc.
Beyond that - the decision probably depends on how much you can afford to put into a pension.
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Not sure if anyone's said this already, but it's not a straightforward comparison....
As a Business Analyst, I spreadsheeted this to death to try and answer - I can only speak for personal circumstances, but assuming c. £1k/month expenditure (mainly travel), and having a wife who would willingly collect dividends for me and two young children meaning an inside rate loses me Child Benefit & Tax Free Childcare, I came to the conclusion that of two roles I was considering, £600 p/d outside was preferable to the £750 p/d inside role, but the difference was marginal.
Another point to add is if you're expenditure is low and you can afford to leave a decent chunk in ltd., this adds to the argument of being outside imho.
Just an opinion DYOR, your results may vary etc TTFN WDFDIK etc.
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Originally posted by pr1 View Post
Have you read the thread?
OP is currently inside on £750/day
OP has an offer for outside with a previous (different) client whom previously paid them £600/day outside 12 months ago
OP is trying to consider what to charge
Also as Eek points out, the OP's numbers appear wrong or at best confusing.
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Originally posted by pr1 View Post
Have you read the thread?
OP is currently inside on £750/day
OP has an offer for outside with a previous (different) client whom previously paid them £600/day outside 12 months ago
OP is trying to consider what to charge
"Hi Mr client. Yes I know you used to pay me £600 a day, but times have changed and my new rate is £800 a day."
Then negotiate from there.
OP is worth £750 a day to someone. OPs tax affairs are not the clients' concern.
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Originally posted by b0redom View PostWild stab in the dark suggests that ~ £600 outside is ~ £750 outside.
I think it really depends on the travel expenses required - because if none are required it's very possible to argue that given the new tax rules the only difference is employer NI at 14.3%
so £750 inside is £660 or so outside and I would personally take the £750 as it allows me more to go into the pension via salary sacrifice.
You would probably need travel costs or another £30/50 a day so ~£700 to make the outside contract worthwhile.
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