Originally posted by KittyCat
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Reply to: Dividends and Taxation
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Previously on "Dividends and Taxation"
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Originally posted by Waldorf View PostYou could take the salary as a lump sum with no NIC or paye, if you took it in the last month of the tax year, my accountant told me I could do that and have nothing deducted.
This was to prevent paying annually and going over reducing thresholds, thus reducing overall bill.
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Originally posted by KittyCat View PostThanks - can you just take the 7068 as a lump sum & avoid operating a payroll? or do you have to submit certain forms for the salary to hmrc? The last couple of years I've just taken all dividends!
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Originally posted by KittyCat View PostThanks - can you just take the 7068 as a lump sum & avoid operating a payroll? or do you have to submit certain forms for the salary to hmrc? The last couple of years I've just taken all dividends!
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Originally posted by KittyCat View PostThanks - can you just take the 7068 as a lump sum & avoid operating a payroll? or do you have to submit certain forms for the salary to hmrc? The last couple of years I've just taken all dividends!
Plus potentially a P11D, although getting a dispensation in place will prevent most of the admin on that one.
The £7,068 is the annual figure, and if paid in one lump sum then NI would be due (as anything over the weekly limit incurs NI). You could simple pay £589 per month.
It's worth paying as there's no tax or NI due, you get pension credit, plus you get a CT deduction, so it's better than paying wholly dividends for a lot of people.
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Originally posted by Clare@InTouch View PostNo, there are different NI limits:
Lower earnings limit, primary Class 1 - this is the £5,304, and the minimum you must earn to get NI credit, even though you don't pay any NI
Primary threshold - £139 a week or £7,228 a year, the point where employee NI kicks in
Secondary threshold - £136 or £7,072 a year, the point where employer NI kicks in (when calculating an annual salary it's actually £7,068).
Tax then applies, on a normal tax code, from £7,475.
HM Revenue & Customs: National Insurance Contributions
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Originally posted by KittyCat View PostThe maximums I listed are from the HMRC site? If I take over 5304 in salary surely I have to pay the NI?
Lower earnings limit, primary Class 1 - this is the £5,304, and the minimum you must earn to get NI credit, even though you don't pay any NI
Primary threshold - £139 a week or £7,228 a year, the point where employee NI kicks in
Secondary threshold - £136 or £7,072 a year, the point where employer NI kicks in (when calculating an annual salary it's actually £7,068).
Tax then applies, on a normal tax code, from £7,475.
http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/rates/nic.htm
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Originally posted by Clare@InTouch View Post£7,068 is the maximum you can take before NI or tax apply, assuming a normal tax code. Paying that level also ensure you get credit for your state pension.
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Originally posted by KittyCat View PostWhy that amount?
The tax threshold is 7475 & the NI is 5304 - surely its better to take 5304 as salary & avoid NI for employee & employer? & the rest as dividends?
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Reading the paper about the tax thresholds for next year, I see that although the personal allowance is to be increased, the higher rate band is to be reduced, so in effect the 40% tax will still be payable on income over £42475 - so effectively a pay freeze for those who only take dividends upto the 40% band.
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Originally posted by Danielsjdaccountancy View PostAlso, don't forget those dreaded payments on account!
HMRC will want half of that again on 31st Jan 12 and the other half 31st July 12, so budget for this. Unless of course you don't expect to take such a high earning in the 12/13 tax year, in which case you can reduce with an SA303 claim.
It is another of the reasons that I never stray beyond the 40% threshold
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Also, don't forget those dreaded payments on account!
HMRC will want half of that again on 31st Jan 12 and the other half 31st July 12, so budget for this. Unless of course you don't expect to take such a high earning in the 12/13 tax year, in which case you can reduce with an SA303 claim.
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