Originally posted by VFV
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Reply to: Paying yourself and spouse wages....
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Previously on "Paying yourself and spouse wages...."
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Thanks for the reply. I send a few hundred every month to support him with his studies anyway, so a working arrangement with a tax benefit on top would work out very well.
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Originally posted by VFV View PostRelevant question so I post here instead of starting a new thread.
I am looking at the possibility of employing my younger brother (living and studying in Greece) as an assistant in my Ltd co, to look after the usual general admin for a salary just below the NI threshold.
The issue of whether the salary can or cannot be commercially justified has been covered in the thread, my two questions are:
1) Can I employ someone who is not resident in the UK and has no National Insurance number in the UK? My guess is no but is there a workaround here?
2) Are the rules different for a non husband-wife relationship, a sibling relationship in this case?
Thanks
2) Yes. S660a still applies fully, under the connected persons rule. It's precisely what it was meant to prevent in the first place.
3) And one for you - why? What are you trying to acheive?
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Relevant question so I post here instead of starting a new thread.
I am looking at the possibility of employing my younger brother (living and studying in Greece) as an assistant in my Ltd co, to look after the usual general admin for a salary just below the NI threshold.
The issue of whether the salary can or cannot be commercially justified has been covered in the thread, my two questions are:
1) Can I employ someone who is not resident in the UK and has no National Insurance number in the UK? My guess is no but is there a workaround here?
2) Are the rules different for a non husband-wife relationship, a sibling relationship in this case?
Thanks
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Originally posted by Wanderer View PostSo to summarise; If you are genuinely in business (eg, outside IR35) then your spouse can work for the business and the government have no appetite for bringing in a family business tax to prevent a director paying salary and/or dividends to their spouse.
The government isn't stupid and they will be under no illusions that in many cases this is simply income shifting by the director to avoid paying tax. They considered legislating against this but decided not to - it seems to me that they are willing to allow this tax break in order to encourage and promote small family businesses because it's good for the economy...
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So to summarise; If you are genuinely in business (eg, outside IR35) then your spouse can work for the business and the government have no appetite for bringing in a family business tax to prevent a director paying salary and/or dividends to their spouse.
The government isn't stupid and they will be under no illusions that in many cases this is simply income shifting by the director to avoid paying tax. They considered legislating against this but decided not to - it seems to me that they are willing to allow this tax break in order to encourage and promote small family businesses because it's good for the economy...
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Originally posted by Craig at Nixon Williams View PostIf I offered to do all of this for £550 per month, would we have a deal? If I get a good few of you on the go I'll be able to give up on accountancy!! For the record, I'm not offering any other wifely duties...
Craig
Even if you said yes, you couldn't do this for more than one person as you'd eventually get caught out and need to be in two places at once etc. Sure you could 'employ' people and offer it as a service but then you'd need to factor in profit etc. and I'm not sure it's a workable model given the uncertain and open-ended set of requirements.
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Originally posted by SueEllen View PostThe 2nd point doesn't count as you have to be clothed - other people without wives who work for them wear clothes and look respectable.
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Originally posted by Craig at Nixon Williams View PostIf I offered to do all of this for £550 per month, would we have a deal? If I get a good few of you on the go I'll be able to give up on accountancy!! For the record, I'm not offering any other wifely duties...
Craig
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Originally posted by convict View PostI was thinking about this too. All of the things my partner does to support me while I'm productive at a clients site.
1. On-call driver for when I can't. I damaged my leg and she drove me to and from work for many weeks.
2. Cleaning/Ironing work clothing. Although I don't have a uniform I do have to keep up a standard of appearance. She enables me to do this. If it's something too much, she outsources it to our dry cleaner service
3. Books/Accounting/general admin. Although some of this goes to an accountant, she keeps tabs on receipts and other billable items so I don't have to. It makes more sense for me to be productive elsewhere.
4. Goods receiving inbound. She has to receive and deal with my various computer bits and also returns busted stuff for RMA etc. so she's effectively my logistics manager too.
All this for 600/month is pretty good in my book. It may not be full-time but there is an on-call element to this, out of hours working for unsociable hours etc. too.
I'm happy having to argue her value to HMRC if necessary.
Craig
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Originally posted by convict View PostI was thinking about this too. All of the things my partner does to support me while I'm productive at a clients site.
1. On-call driver for when I can't. I damaged my leg and she drove me to and from work for many weeks.
2. Cleaning/Ironing work clothing. Although I don't have a uniform I do have to keep up a standard of appearance. She enables me to do this. If it's something too much, she outsources it to our dry cleaner service
3. Books/Accounting/general admin. Although some of this goes to an accountant, she keeps tabs on receipts and other billable items so I don't have to. It makes more sense for me to be productive elsewhere.
4. Goods receiving inbound. She has to receive and deal with my various computer bits and also returns busted stuff for RMA etc. so she's effectively my logistics manager too.
All this for 600/month is pretty good in my book. It may not be full-time but there is an on-call element to this, out of hours working for unsociable hours etc. too.
I'm happy having to argue her value to HMRC if necessary.
The rest are very good points and I would record them somewhere.
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Originally posted by Jessica@WhiteFieldTax View PostI'm sure the spouses (can be either way) do plenty of work, just never recognised and rewarded - the dynamics of most families, and why until comparatively recently, and mooted to be revived in part, there was an element of transferable personal allowance.
I don't think its ever that hard to justify a spousal salary in most businesses, but if in doubt let the spouse be secretary or director, both roles carry responsibility enough to warrant a fee.
1. On-call driver for when I can't. I damaged my leg and she drove me to and from work for many weeks.
2. Cleaning/Ironing work clothing. Although I don't have a uniform I do have to keep up a standard of appearance. She enables me to do this. If it's something too much, she outsources it to our dry cleaner service
3. Books/Accounting/general admin. Although some of this goes to an accountant, she keeps tabs on receipts and other billable items so I don't have to. It makes more sense for me to be productive elsewhere.
4. Goods receiving inbound. She has to receive and deal with my various computer bits and also returns busted stuff for RMA etc. so she's effectively my logistics manager too.
All this for 600/month is pretty good in my book. It may not be full-time but there is an on-call element to this, out of hours working for unsociable hours etc. too.
I'm happy having to argue her value to HMRC if necessary.
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Originally posted by eek View PostYou need to show that the amount of money you pay her (that is wages not dividends) is the market rate for the work that she does.
That means you can't pay her £624 as a bookkeeper if it takes 10 minutes a month (an extreme example)
A bank pays a director millions... does it have to justify to HMRC that the payment is not to high? No.
EDIT: ok I should have read the whole thread since that's where it got diverted
But just a comment. I wouldn't pay any old bod £600 for 10 mins work, but due to the confidential nature of my records and accounts, I might well choose to employ a family member to do the work and also choose to pay them generously.Last edited by Platypus; 22 February 2013, 12:12.
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Originally posted by Wanderer View PostThe presumption here is that psychocandy's spouse plays an active part in running the family business and is unpaid at the present time. Paying a salary would simply be recognising the valuable contribution to the business.
It's interesting to look at the Arctic systems case - Mrs Jones was paid a salary but HMRC made no move to question her contribution to the business.
Am not trying to be one man fighting a lost cause. Just annoys me when people don't think about this and go for it just because it saves them tax without thinking about why etc. As I say, if you are gonna do this with no justification you might as well cook the rest of your books. Same thing.Last edited by northernladuk; 22 February 2013, 11:53.
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostAgain, another post about paying wife to avoid tax. Not a single comment about her actually doing any work.
I don't think its ever that hard to justify a spousal salary in most businesses, but if in doubt let the spouse be secretary or director, both roles carry responsibility enough to warrant a fee.
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