Originally posted by northernladuk
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Reply to: Inside IR35: working practises
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Previously on "Inside IR35: working practises"
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Originally posted by David71 View PostThanks for the replies.
I get the financial impact of IR35 and how it works etc. but was wondering if it had a wider impact on the day to day working conditions.
Looking at your experiences it generally doesn't and is just a pure cash grab.
Cheers
Stop thinking so one dimensionally and lots more will become apparant.
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Originally posted by David71 View PostThanks for the replies.
I get the financial impact of IR35 and how it works etc. but was wondering if it had a wider impact on the day to day working conditions.
Looking at your experiences it generally doesn't and is just a pure cash grab.
Cheers
Although most clients were pretty controlling in the past anyway when they shouldn't have been, so probably doesn't make much difference in reality.
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Thanks for the replies.
I get the financial impact of IR35 and how it works etc. but was wondering if it had a wider impact on the day to day working conditions.
Looking at your experiences it generally doesn't and is just a pure cash grab.
Cheers
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Originally posted by rocktronAMP View PostSo the stuff, I entered in Contractor Umbrella calculator (https://www.contractorumbrella.com/) is doubtful then
I entered rate £500 per day, 5 days a week and 1% pension to simulate an IR35 role for 12 months.
£6,051.44 from a gros £10,000 (20 days work)
Even then they are about £200 over in my book, £10500 nets about £5875 PAYE using other websites i used, and you still need to take off the brolly fee from that, say £95
So you end up losing 45% at £500 a day in total deductions (£5780 is 55% of 10500). At 600 a day and above the percentage deducted is even higher, you pay even more than 45% in total deductions.
Perhaps they have a way for you to claim circa £200 a month in expenses, and that explains the £200 a month discrepancy i noticed.Last edited by Fraidycat; 12 February 2021, 16:52.
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Originally posted by GhostofTarbera View PostTotally wrong
It’s exactly the same as before (end client does not care if via a Ltd or brolly, you are just a resource )
Your employer is the umbrella who again don’t see you as a real employee
Only real change is you get paid 53% of the gross rate into your pesonal bank account
Sent from my iPhone using Contractor UK Forum
I entered rate £500 per day, 5 days a week and 1% pension to simulate an IR35 role for 12 months.
£6,051.44 from a gros £10,000 (20 days work)
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Originally posted by David71 View PostHi All
Just reading a few 'IR35' threads and it got me thinking that the whole inside / outside thing is more than just what the effect on the ££££ is.
One of the reasons I don't look at inside roles is that I get the impression you'll be treated more as an employee than a contractor - having to put up with being told what / where / how to work, having line management and office politics etc.
I love what I do, and how I do it, finally getting away from all the employee tulip that ground me down for so many years.
Anyway, I was just wondering if this is an unfair view of 'inside' contracting and maybe (apart from the ££££) is inside not so bad?
You probably need to read up on threads on the Loan Charge Scandal, IR35 history from 1999 to now, Off Payroll Worker rules, Living And Working Away From Home (LAWAFH), limited company expenses, umbrella companies and then read that stuff again.
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Originally posted by Fraidycat View PostBut now i sense that some of the lower managers, who are just jobsworths, don't want to get the blame for a failed HMRC investigation.
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostYou'd probably be wrong then. IR35 is about taxation. Nothing more. There are controls in the contract that make it an IR35 friendly contract but those are often forgotten about when you hit the clients office. The client managers rarely have a clue what is in the contract and will just treat you as they treat you. Whether you are inside or outside won't matter a jot to them and I'll bet they often won't know. Some will understand you are a contractor and how you work, many others won't and just see you as a temp resource regardless of status. If they want to give you more work or move you on to other stuff they will. There is only you that cares about your status and getting SoW's to cover yourself etc.
If i raise something as being not compatible with outside IR35 they do take it onboard now.
Where as previously the managers didn't really care, there was nothing in it for them.
But now i sense that some of the lower managers, who are just jobsworths, don't want to get the blame for a failed HMRC investigation.Last edited by Fraidycat; 12 February 2021, 15:47.
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Originally posted by GhostofTarbera View PostTotally wrong
It’s exactly the same as before (end client does not care if via a Ltd or brolly, you are just a resource )
Your employer is the umbrella who again don’t see you as a real employee
Only real change is you get paid 53% of the gross rate into your pesonal bank account
Sent from my iPhone using Contractor UK Forum
Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by David71 View PostHi All
Just reading a few 'IR35' threads and it got me thinking that the whole inside / outside thing is more than just what the effect on the ££££ is.
One of the reasons I don't look at inside roles is that I get the impression you'll be treated more as an employee than a contractor - having to put up with being told what / where / how to work, having line management and office politics etc.
I love what I do, and how I do it, finally getting away from all the employee tulip that ground me down for so many years.
Anyway, I was just wondering if this is an unfair view of 'inside' contracting and maybe (apart from the ££££) is inside not so bad?
It’s exactly the same as before (end client does not care if via a Ltd or brolly, you are just a resource )
Your employer is the umbrella who again don’t see you as a real employee
Only real change is you get paid 53% of the gross rate into your pesonal bank account
Sent from my iPhone using Contractor UK Forum
Leave a comment:
-
You'd probably be wrong then. IR35 is about taxation. Nothing more. There are controls in the contract that make it an IR35 friendly contract but those are often forgotten about when you hit the clients office. The client managers rarely have a clue what is in the contract and will just treat you as they treat you. Whether you are inside or outside won't matter a jot to them and I'll bet they often won't know. Some will understand you are a contractor and how you work, many others won't and just see you as a temp resource regardless of status. If they want to give you more work or move you on to other stuff they will. There is only you that cares about your status and getting SoW's to cover yourself etc.Last edited by northernladuk; 11 February 2021, 22:46.
Leave a comment:
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Inside IR35: working practises
Hi All
Just reading a few 'IR35' threads and it got me thinking that the whole inside / outside thing is more than just what the effect on the ££££ is.
One of the reasons I don't look at inside roles is that I get the impression you'll be treated more as an employee than a contractor - having to put up with being told what / where / how to work, having line management and office politics etc.
I love what I do, and how I do it, finally getting away from all the employee tulip that ground me down for so many years.
Anyway, I was just wondering if this is an unfair view of 'inside' contracting and maybe (apart from the ££££) is inside not so bad?Tags: None
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