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Previously on "To 'Accountant' or not to 'Accountant' - tis the question?"

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  • spoons
    replied
    'You pays your money, you takes your choice'

    IMHO - It all depends on you attitude to risk.

    I personally feel more comfortable knowing that the accountant is there double checking things.

    Leave a comment:


  • hgllgh
    replied
    but surely there is a case to be made for a simple one man band ltd co.
    Get on the flat rate VAT, calculate PAYE from the HMRC employers CD. To do this there isn't much that changes so there's not that much monitoring needed for HMRC rule changes?

    I always found that I got more advice out of these forums than from my accountant and that the advice needed was few and far between in any case.
    Also, I had late payments due to my accountant being too slow, or things going missing in the post and on occasion they made mistakes which I had to correct them on! (so if you are checking, may aswell DIY)

    Leave a comment:


  • Ardesco
    replied
    I see lots of people are making it sound very easy, the big catch is if they change the rules....

    Your accountant will constantly keep updated on all the latest changes to rules, how they affect you and what they need to do to ensure you make as much profit as possible one the new rules come in. They can advise changes in the way you extract money from the company and they can also double check everything you do to make sure you haven't screwed up letting the taxman get his foot in the door for a substantial fine.

    Do you have enough time to read every snippet of information that comes out of HMRC as well as gigging full time? Are you sure you are always doing everything in the most tax efficient way possible? Is it worth the risk that you could be doing it wrong?

    I would suggest an accountant is the smart option, watch all the people without one come on here and ask stupid questions, who knows if they get the right advice given to them, after all we are not accountants....

    Leave a comment:


  • hgllgh
    replied
    You can register on the HMRC website for VAT and PAYE returns and submit them online. You need to keep your books anyway. I am doing this now but havent submitted PAYE year end as yet. I plan to get an accountant to do my Companies House and CT return just in case.

    Leave a comment:


  • fossunited
    replied
    I'm new here, but just thought I'd put my 2 cents in.

    I'm an accountant, and I don't even dream of doing my own books. In fact, most of my friends who are also accounting contractors don't bother either, because it isn't worth the hassle.

    If you work through the right company they can pretty much do it all for you without much hassle. In the last year I have paid less than 20% of my total earnings in tax and accounting fees, I paid an extra £120 or so for them to do my tax return, and still got a refund at the end of it. In return for giving up this, I had all my nights free, no issues with having to file anything. All in all, I think the fact that I don't have the hassle of all of the paperwork required is worth it.

    Leave a comment:


  • dude69
    replied
    Originally posted by Hemingfield View Post
    Hi,

    If you run your limited company in a very straight forward manner and work out all tax and vat payments yourself can you theoretically not require the use of an accountant?

    I - by no means wish to put a downer on using an accountant in any way, shape or form. I am aware that a good accountant are worth their weight in gold. I'm just setting up and trying to keep costs down (until I get going).
    Why not?

    The VAT on flat rate scheme is trivial, just submit every three months online return for 13% (12% first year) of monies received, and pay online. Takes about 10 minutes every 3 months. Call it 1 hour per year.

    PAYE is fairly straight-forward, though they do use silly tables rather than calculating it via the percentages. Annual return can take 15 minutes online, but there are various silly forms that you may wish to print out and file. Monthly payslips can be printed out in the event that you need them. Schedule standing order to pay PAYE.

    Companies House annual return is just directors' names, shareholdings, etc., very very simply, 10 minutes work.

    Ongoing work is a transaction spreadsheet showing dates, payees, and amounts for receipts and purchases. This is somewhat time-consuming, but even if you pay an accountant you need to do this (they won't just take a pile of receipts and invoices and tally things up), so there's no extra time here.

    Annual accounts via Companies House is a fill-in-the-boxes pdf file, with balance sheet (no P&L). Most of this is really straight-forward; the main thing at this point is to understand the fact that you need to show your liabilities (VAT on sales already made but not yet remitted to HMRC, and corporation tax on your profits), and you need to account for accured income (work that has been done but not yet billed). You also need to understand about depreciation of assets - when you buy an asset, it doesn't cost your company anything in terms of its balance sheet - £1k goes off cash, £1k goes on assets. What costs you is the depreciation, which you can model as 25% per year, so you put down £750 for the asset value.

    The Corporation Tax return is done at the same time, once a year. You need to prepare a P&L for this. The P&L is fairly straightforward, just break down expenses (including depreciation) and income into categories, and then calculate net profit from this. Then you need a separate sheet to show Corporation Tax, which should be split between tax years in proportion to days, if your accounts year is not April 1 - March 31st. This is just Net Profit + non-allowable expenses (depreciation, entertaining, etc.) - capital allowances (which will be 100% from April 1st) * 20% CT rate (going up to 21%).

    All together, that's an evening a year to do your accounts, plus a couple of hours for VAT, PAYE, and annual return.

    Really there's absolutely no use for an accountant, except the annual return, which you can spend a little time to understand yourself, or even pay an accountant to compile. I can't see the sense in retaining one year round.

    Leave a comment:


  • PAH
    replied
    Originally posted by malvolio View Post
    Except you have to make some kind of effort to stay onside with the taxation rules, and you have a legal obligation to ensure YourCo is solvent and legal. Having an accountant or not has sod all to do with IR35 insurance. Also, you can't insure agasint evasion, since that's a criminal offence.

    So all in all, perhaps not a very intelligent contribution, eh?

    Sorry, was getting ahead of myself. Please re-read my post in a year's time when Churchill will have launched tax evasion insurance, I'm sure. Since when has not being able to get a payout ever stopped the insurance companies from (mis)selling it.

    Leave a comment:


  • thunderlizard
    replied
    I don't think you can get insurance against making a balls up of your year-end accounts.

    It's all down to your appetite for organisation and following fairly complicated rules, and remembering deadlines. It is certainly possible to read up on the obligations of a small limited company and fill in all the forms yourself. People on the HMRC helplines actually are helpful too. If you're just starting up and you don't want to sign away £1k a year, doing it yourself is a strong option. But I like having my accountant - even though they're of the production-line variety, I'm sure they let me enjoy at least 3-4 weekends a year that I'd otherwise spend poring over accounts.

    Leave a comment:


  • malvolio
    replied
    Originally posted by PAH View Post
    Ditch the accountant. It's cheaper to get IR35 and tax evasion insurance.
    Except you have to make some kind of effort to stay onside with the taxation rules, and you have a legal obligation to ensure YourCo is solvent and legal. Having an accountant or not has sod all to do with IR35 insurance. Also, you can't insure agasint evasion, since that's a criminal offence.

    So all in all, perhaps not a very intelligent contribution, eh?

    Leave a comment:


  • PAH
    replied
    Ditch the accountant. It's cheaper to get IR35 and tax evasion insurance.

    Leave a comment:


  • malvolio
    replied
    If an accountant costs you money he's doing it wrong. You are more likely to lose by not using one until you are 100% happy with the rules and processes and timings - and even then I can still demonstrate they're cheaper than DIY.

    Leave a comment:


  • ASB
    replied
    Yes. Just don't do anything wrong. Don't forget to ensure you claim all capital allowances etc. in the CT calculation. Differentiate correctly between expenses and capital purchases too.

    There is a school of thought that says HMRC don't particularly like books submitted by individuals and may be more likely to investigate.

    Leave a comment:


  • To 'Accountant' or not to 'Accountant' - tis the question?

    Hi,

    If you run your limited company in a very straight forward manner and work out all tax and vat payments yourself can you theoretically not require the use of an accountant?

    I - by no means wish to put a downer on using an accountant in any way, shape or form. I am aware that a good accountant are worth their weight in gold. I'm just setting up and trying to keep costs down (until I get going).

    Cheers muchily,

    Hem

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