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Reply to: Year end Invoicing

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Previously on "Year end Invoicing"

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  • philip@wellwoodhoyle
    replied
    The date of invoices is irrelevant. The business is taxed on the value of work done in a period, not the amount of work invoiced, nor the amount of money received. If they aren't invoicing until after the year end, they should instead be bringing in either accrued income if the work is completed, or work in progress if the work is not completed.

    Leave a comment:


  • ASB
    replied
    I'd be really interested to figure out the "obvious" tax advantages. The only obvious one (at the risk of jail time for false accounting) is that it deferes a little tax for a year.

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  • r0bly0ns
    replied
    Corp tax goes up to 21% after this year end, so you'd be 1% worse of straight away

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  • Ardesco
    replied
    I don't see anything obvious myself unless he will manage to break even by differing the money across to the next financial year. IMHO he's only putting it off because next year he'll be in exactly the same situation.

    If we were talking about funds drawn from the compnay I could understand doing that to ensure that you don't break into the higher tax band.

    (I may of course be missing something obvious...)

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  • Guest's Avatar
    Guest started a topic Year end Invoicing

    Year end Invoicing

    One of my mate does not invoice the client/agency during the months of feb and march and does it together at the end of april after the new financial year has kicked in.

    He says there are obvious tax advantages in that(CT??)....i can't see how though or am i missing something here?

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