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Previously on ""I get *all* my expenses back...""

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  • expat
    replied
    Originally posted by Trev16v View Post
    ...."The company Christmas party for the five of us is already booked and paid for via expenses". The five people being himself, obviously, the wife and the in-laws who down as company secretary, etc.

    All family mobile phones paid for via expenses.

    And they are renting their own personal laptop computers back to themselves.

    Seriously...
    Christmas (or other) party: up to 150.00 per employee. Each employee may bring a partner etc, so Director + Co Sec can get max 4 people. The party must be open to all employees and must be an annual event. If the cost goes above 150.00 then it is ALL taxable.

    One mobile phone for each employee. Not shareholder, never mind spouse etc.


    No wonder Hector thinks we're worth a second look. These people are thieves, and they are stealing from you and me. Well, me anyway.

    Leave a comment:


  • pmeswani
    replied
    Originally posted by Trev16v View Post
    Tried to have the conversation again and get things straight, but I shouldn't have bothered.

    He continues to insist that "you are not the company, the company is employing you as the director; and you get all of your expenses back. Are you telling me that if you spend £10, then your company only gives you £2.10 back?"

    I respond along the lines of: "Well no, I'm saying that you can draw the entire expense back from the company so you're not out of pocket, but you will still be down as far as the company profits are concerned, as these are ultimately your earnings..." and I'm interrupted with "But never mind the company profits... the company is employing you... It pays your expenses back..." And on it went.

    So I kind of gave up.

    He confirms he's not paying any CT this year. "Expenses.. you have to milk it" he advises.

    "The company Christmas party for the five of us is already booked and paid for via expenses". The five people being himself, obviously, the wife and the in-laws who down as company secretary, etc.

    All family mobile phones paid for via expenses.

    And they are renting their own personal laptop computers back to themselves.

    Seriously...
    It does go down to what his dispensation has agreed with HMRC. If he is going beyound what has been declared on his P11D, then he will be liable to be investigated by HMRC. You could ask him if he claims 40p a mile beyond 10,000 miles (or whatever the upper limit is) when he drives his car.

    However, I could be wrong in my understanding of dispensation.

    Leave a comment:


  • Trev16v
    replied
    Tried to have the conversation again and get things straight, but I shouldn't have bothered.

    He continues to insist that "you are not the company, the company is employing you as the director; and you get all of your expenses back. Are you telling me that if you spend £10, then your company only gives you £2.10 back?"

    I respond along the lines of: "Well no, I'm saying that you can draw the entire expense back from the company so you're not out of pocket, but you will still be down as far as the company profits are concerned, as these are ultimately your earnings..." and I'm interrupted with "But never mind the company profits... the company is employing you... It pays your expenses back..." And on it went.

    So I kind of gave up.

    He confirms he's not paying any CT this year. "Expenses.. you have to milk it" he advises.

    "The company Christmas party for the five of us is already booked and paid for via expenses". The five people being himself, obviously, the wife and the in-laws who down as company secretary, etc.

    All family mobile phones paid for via expenses.

    And they are renting their own personal laptop computers back to themselves.

    Seriously...

    Leave a comment:


  • Jaws
    replied
    With regard to the expenses, I view it as slightly more than 1/5th off because if I'd been spending my own money, it would no doubt be inside the higher rate tax band. I thought it was closer to 1/3 off.

    Leave a comment:


  • Alan @ BroomeAffinity
    replied
    In fairness, what contractors say to each other and what happens in reality can be distant relatives at best. I often speak to contractors who say that their mate (who is also a client of mine) is only paying £xx in tax when it turns out that they are only paying £xx in PAYE plus £yyy in CT.

    Leave a comment:


  • TheFaQQer
    replied
    Originally posted by Just1morethen View Post
    You are right Trev. So take the high ground and rest secure in the knowledge that those around you are (a) misinformed; or (b) monumentally stupid.
    I'll add (c) so bad at their job that the company makes no money. (which may be covered by (b) already )

    Leave a comment:


  • expat
    replied
    Originally posted by TheBigYinJames View Post
    There's a lot of testosterone attached to being a freelancer. Many believe themselves to be entrepreneurs, and derive a lot of their value of self-worth from the mistaken belief that they are the do-ers of society rather than workers.

    I believe this stems from the fact that many are young, and deprived of the self-referential respect that moving up within a company might have given them with their friends and family, have to derive their self worth from somewhere, they put it onto their income and perceived status as a 'company director'. As this is usually not recognized by people outside of the contracting world, they sometimes feel they are having to justify "not having a real job" to their family and friends all the time, and I believe it's this level of alienation that drives a lot of them to start denying the existence of society and become what we know affectionately here as Toryboys.

    In reality, working as a freelancer is not much different from what they'd be doing as a graduate recruit at a big company. Contracting is a payment model, it's not an ethos. It doesn't define who you are, only the method that money gets from the person you do work for to your personal bank account.

    Leave a comment:


  • expat
    replied
    Originally posted by Trev16v View Post
    Yet on numerous occasions I've spoken with contractors - some of them complete newbies, some of them long established - who insist everything's paid back to them.
    Everything is paid back to them, but it is paid by their company, with money that it could otherwise have used for salary etc. It has to be their company that pays, who else is there? The Tooth Fairy?

    Leave a comment:


  • NotAllThere
    replied
    Originally posted by Trev16v View Post
    ....Is this just a common stupid misconception?...
    Yes

    Originally posted by Trev16v View Post
    ....On another note, why do some contractors have to 'talk big' and 'big themselves up',...
    Small private parts.

    Leave a comment:


  • TheBigYinJames
    replied
    Originally posted by Trev16v View Post
    On another note, why do some contractors have to 'talk big' and 'big themselves up', consistently refer to themselves as "We" rather than "I" during all conversation with you, just because they've got their spouse named as a shareholder?
    There's a lot of testosterone attached to being a freelancer. Many believe themselves to be entrepreneurs, and derive a lot of their value of self-worth from the mistaken belief that they are the do-ers of society rather than workers.

    I believe this stems from the fact that many are young, and deprived of the self-referential respect that moving up within a company might have given them with their friends and family, have to derive their self worth from somewhere, they put it onto their income and perceived status as a 'company director'. As this is usually not recognized by people outside of the contracting world, they sometimes feel they are having to justify "not having a real job" to their family and friends all the time, and I believe it's this level of alienation that drives a lot of them to start denying the existence of society and become what we know affectionately here as Toryboys.

    In reality, working as a freelancer is not much different from what they'd be doing as a graduate recruit at a big company. Contracting is a payment model, it's not an ethos. It doesn't define who you are, only the method that money gets from the person you do work for to your personal bank account.

    Leave a comment:


  • Alan @ BroomeAffinity
    replied
    You are right Trev. So take the high ground and rest secure in the knowledge that those around you are (a) misinformed; or (b) monumentally stupid.

    Leave a comment:


  • ratewhore
    replied
    Fair point, well made.

    Consider this, if I buy a book for business purposes out of my personal money, I am entitled to reimburse myself the full cost of the book. So, your colleague is correct so far, he has paid himself back the full amount.

    In your accounts, the cost of the book will be taken off your profit before CT is applied, which reduces the CT by 20% (for simplicities sake) of the value of the book. So you are right.

    As for the guy you work with, he's clearly on a very very poor rate, oh yeah, and talking out of his hoop...

    Leave a comment:


  • Trev16v
    started a topic "I get *all* my expenses back..."

    "I get *all* my expenses back..."

    Hi all,

    New guy here. Please don't kick the newbie too hard. I haven't been contracting for too long (around three years) and I work in electronics and embedded software. I use a Limited company and use Brookson for accountancy.

    Now I've always understood that the result of 'claiming back expenses' is that you pay Corporation Tax on the profit that is the total income minus expenses. So in simple terms, 'claiming back your expenses' really means that, by the time you've taken your salary and all dividends for a given period, you in effect recover just a fifth of the expenses you have had to pay out of your pocket. Or, if I were to stay in a £30 B&B for five nights in a row, then what's in my pocket has been dented by £120.

    Yet on numerous occasions I've spoken with contractors - some of them complete newbies, some of them long established - who insist everything's paid back to them.

    Is this just a common stupid misconception? Or, am I missing something, despite how the FAQs on both the Brookson website and on this very website demonstrate quite clearly that claiming expenses just provides Corporation tax relief? I feel stupid having to ask this here, but when you've had to argue until you're blue in the face with some other guy who's insisting black is white, you can start to doubt yourself.

    Furthermore, a guy with whom I was having such an argument very recently was also insisting that he had 'no Corporation tax to pay this year whatsoever' as a result of claiming expenses. Uhm...

    On another note, why do some contractors have to 'talk big' and 'big themselves up', consistently refer to themselves as "We" rather than "I" during all conversation with you, just because they've got their spouse named as a shareholder?

    I'll wind my neck in now.

    Cheers,

    Trev

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