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Previously on "Putting money aside"

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  • cojak
    replied
    Oh Dear.

    Milan

    Leave a comment:


  • BlasterBates
    replied
    This sounds like a very clever scheme for maximising your taxation and ensuring you pay practically your entire income in tax, ingenious if I may so, i.e. put money aside to pay tax thus increasing your tax bill etc.

    I would advise you to put this ingenious scheme on paper then show it in mirror and photograph the image. If my supposition is correct the resulting image will then represent an ingenuious scheme for avoiding taxation.
    Last edited by BlasterBates; 7 March 2006, 16:59.

    Leave a comment:


  • malvolio
    replied
    Original Poster....

    Abbreviation used by people too lazy to run back up the thread and find his/her forum id...

    Leave a comment:


  • boredsenseless
    replied
    Originally posted by malvolio
    True, except (a) there's no point in doing so and (b) ISTR companies have to pay out salary before issuing the payslip.

    Plus, I suspect this is all news to the OP anyway
    Go on then whats an OP ????

    Leave a comment:


  • boredsenseless
    replied
    Originally posted by DaveB
    Unless it falls under PAYE and NI, which employers deduct at source and pay to the IR. If it's PAYE / NI payments then then I think you can hold the cash in a co. account untill it's due. IANAA, talk to yours.
    Not really any point in holding the PAYE in an account seperate to the normal trading account as it has to be paid to gordon once a month anyway.

    Leave a comment:


  • malvolio
    replied
    True, except (a) there's no point in doing so and (b) ISTR companies have to pay out salary before issuing the payslip.

    Plus, I suspect this is all news to the OP anyway

    Leave a comment:


  • DaveB
    replied
    Unless it falls under PAYE and NI, which employers deduct at source and pay to the IR. If it's PAYE / NI payments then then I think you can hold the cash in a co. account untill it's due. IANAA, talk to yours.

    Leave a comment:


  • expat
    replied
    Originally posted by Mikeeelawson
    Every month I try to put enough money aside in another business account to take into consideration my personal and corporation tax + VAT (that way I don't spend it).

    If I take out money from my business account to pay off my personal tax, am I not getting into a viscious circle:

    Step 1: Business account 1 -> Business Acount 2 = 35% of dividend for Corp and Personal tax

    Step 2: Business Account 2: Cheque from account to pay personal tax

    My issue is taking savings out of account 2 to pay personal tax might in itself attract tax (almost like taking out a dividend to pay for personal tax)

    And so the viscious circle goes around.

    Any thoughts?

    Mike
    Others will explain it better, but in short:
    Corporation tax is paid by a company.
    Income tax is paid by a person.


    So you can't pay your income tax from the same account as the corporation tax. Whose account is it, yours or the company's? Not the same thing.

    Or, to put it another way, your company may not pay your tax for you. Only you can do that: the nearest that your company can do is give you the money that you will need to pay tax. That money then becomes income, naturally.

    Leave a comment:


  • malvolio
    replied
    Using business money to pay personal liabilities is at best an extended directors loan and you now owe interest and/or BIK on it, and at worst blatant Tax evasion. Which is illegal.

    I suggest you take some professional advice, sharpish.

    Leave a comment:


  • Mikeeelawson
    started a topic Putting money aside

    Putting money aside

    Every month I try to put enough money aside in another business account to take into consideration my personal and corporation tax + VAT (that way I don't spend it).

    If I take out money from my business account to pay off my personal tax, am I not getting into a viscious circle:

    Step 1: Business account 1 -> Business Acount 2 = 35% of dividend for Corp and Personal tax

    Step 2: Business Account 2: Cheque from account to pay personal tax

    My issue is taking savings out of account 2 to pay personal tax might in itself attract tax (almost like taking out a dividend to pay for personal tax)

    And so the viscious circle goes around.

    Any thoughts?

    Mike
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