Originally posted by Mr.Whippy
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Previously on "New company strucure - recommendation please"
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Originally posted by Ruse View PostMy understanding of the new Company Law rules is that it would now be possible to have your spouse as the sole director and the fee earner as Co. Sec., is there any issue with structureing this way around ?
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Originally posted by Maslins View PostHaving a spouse with 50% of the shares is still ok tax avoidance. HMRC challenged it recently and lost in the High Court (Arctic Systems case if you want to Google it).
HMRC have since talking about creating some income shifting rules to prevent that type of setup working in future, but the rules were tosh and never implemented.
So basically yes, you can do everything you've suggested. Only caveat is that you'll need to justify wages to your spouse. Assuming you're only likely to pay them ~£5.7k as you will yourself, it's not too hard to justify a wage of that size.
Doing things that way, on profits of up to around £100k you can get ~81% in your pocket.
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Originally posted by matrixfan View Postanother option I was considering was to register a new 2nd company in name of my spouse and then pay her company for the services she offers i.e. marketing, admin etc but there is the overhead of maintaining the accounts of two different companies
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ok, many thanks
another option I was considering was to register a new 2nd company in name of my spouse and then pay her company for the services she offers i.e. marketing, admin etc but there is the overhead of maintaining the accounts of two different companies
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Originally posted by malvolio View PostThey only decided to park it, not give up any idea of ressurecting it.
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Originally posted by Maslins View Post@BolshieBastard - Arctic Systems had nothing to do with IR35! It all surrounded husband doing all the work, wife doing basically nothing (for the business), but them being 50:50 shareholders and taking dividends in line with their shareholdings. HMRC argued the husband was simply giving his income to his wife, so he should be taxed on it. The Lords disagreed.
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@BolshieBastard - Arctic Systems had nothing to do with IR35! It all surrounded husband doing all the work, wife doing basically nothing (for the business), but them being 50:50 shareholders and taking dividends in line with their shareholdings. HMRC argued the husband was simply giving his income to his wife, so he should be taxed on it. The Lords disagreed.
The most famous case on IR35 to date is the Dragonfly case, perhaps you're confusing it with that.
@Mr.Whippy - It is frowned upon by HMRC, that's why they challenged it all the way to the House of Lords...but HMRC lost, so (for the time being at least) it's a perfectly valid thing to do.
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It's only evasion if it's illegal. This isn't, and we have the Law Lords to cite as the reference if HEctor tries to make a fuss. Anyway, if YourCo stops trading, your other half's total income goes with it. I think that demonstrates a certain degree of mutual interest in it, don't you?
You don't have to give her a salary if she does not work for YourCo, but you can give her shares and hence dividend income and effectively use both your tax free allowances.
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Originally posted by BolshieBastard View PostAnd yes, if you have a spouse, its a good idea to make her a shareholder \ director \ employee.
My missus does all the admin stuff for 'our' limited co and is first point of contact for accountant, agents and hmrc etc.
I was told that it was kind of frowned up by hmrc as it was pretty much blatant tax evasion, but if that isn't the case should I perhaps reconsider and make her an employee/director?
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Originally posted by BolshieBastard View PostIIRC the Arctic case was an IR35 investigation which went to the High Court and not S660 (income shifting).
But, you're correct further income shifting regulations were shelved. And yes, if you have a spouse, its a good idea to make her a shareholder \ director \ employee.
My missus does all the admin stuff for 'our' limited co and is first point of contact for accountant, agents and hmrc etc.
However, the Family Business Tax option (I hate the term "Income Shifting" about as much as I hate "Personal Service Company"; it's simply NL propaganda) is still on the table. They only decided to park it, not give up any idea of ressurecting it.
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Originally posted by BolshieBastard View PostIIRC the Arctic case was an IR35 investigation which went to the High Court and not S660
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Originally posted by Maslins View PostHaving a spouse with 50% of the shares is still ok tax avoidance. HMRC challenged it recently and lost in the High Court (Arctic Systems case if you want to Google it).
HMRC have since talking about creating some income shifting rules to prevent that type of setup working in future, but the rules were tosh and never implemented.
So basically yes, you can do everything you've suggested. Only caveat is that you'll need to justify wages to your spouse. Assuming you're only likely to pay them ~£5.7k as you will yourself, it's not too hard to justify a wage of that size.
Doing things that way, on profits of up to around £100k you can get ~81% in your pocket.
But, you're correct further income shifting regulations were shelved. And yes, if you have a spouse, its a good idea to make her a shareholder \ director \ employee.
My missus does all the admin stuff for 'our' limited co and is first point of contact for accountant, agents and hmrc etc.
Leave a comment:
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Having a spouse with 50% of the shares is still ok tax avoidance. HMRC challenged it recently and lost in the High Court (Arctic Systems case if you want to Google it).
HMRC have since talking about creating some income shifting rules to prevent that type of setup working in future, but the rules were tosh and never implemented.
So basically yes, you can do everything you've suggested. Only caveat is that you'll need to justify wages to your spouse. Assuming you're only likely to pay them ~£5.7k as you will yourself, it's not too hard to justify a wage of that size.
Doing things that way, on profits of up to around £100k you can get ~81% in your pocket.
Leave a comment:
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