Originally posted by Freaki Li Cuatre
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Previously on "When does the 24 month rule reset if with the same client? Or does it not?"
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Originally posted by Freaki Li Cuatre View PostI'm going back to a client with whom I finished in November 2012. I was there for 24 months.
Do you think I have a clean slate wrt to the 2 year rule and this client?
http://forums.contractoruk.com/accou...-nutshell.html
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I'm going back to a client with whom I finished in November 2012. I was there for 24 months.
Do you think I have a clean slate wrt to the 2 year rule and this client?
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And remember, it;s not the point at which you have been there for over tow years that you stop claiming, it is the point at which you *know* you will be there for more than two years, which could be 6 months or more earlier...
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Originally posted by escapeUK View PostYou seem to be calculating percentages at the new site rather than the original site.
Tell you what, you do it your way and I'll do it mine. I haven't blown the 24 month limit in the last 15 years, so I must be doing something right.
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostWhere as all this advice on your two questions is correct your questions show a total lack of understanding of the rule. It would help you in the long run to check the link to the right and Google to understand it further to help with questions you will have in the future.
I dont know why they cant hire staff that can write consise laws, something that isnt up for interpretation. This is what you CAN and CANT do, not leave it up to the individual to draw their own conclutions/understandings.
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I rotate my contracts between London, Bristol, Manchester and Birmingham to avoid this. Fortunately my skill-set doesn't limit me to The City (something those people wanting to work in IBs would do well to remember).
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Originally posted by malvolio View PostYeah, right, I know nothing.
Let's assume the 40% is the trigger (it isn't, but what the hell...)
After 3 months, you're only looking at 21 months of the original 24. Which is 14% (3/21*100).
After 6 months, it's 18. Which is 33% (6/18*100).
After 7 months it's 41%...
So looks like you have to spend 15 months at a new site before being able to claim at the old one.Last edited by escapeUK; 19 September 2011, 06:18.
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Originally posted by BolshieBastard View PostA single 3 monther at another geographical location is enough of a break.
Edit: Come to think of it Mal, where do HMRC actually say that it is a rolling window
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Originally posted by Acme Thunderer View PostThere is nothing in the link that counters what I said. Working on the assumption that you have been in effectively the same location for 24 months solid. After this time you need to get the total content of time spent at the location below 40% for a sliding 24 month window this means 'aging' out the work done inside the original 24 months, until its below 40% of the total sliding window.
Let's assume the 40% is the trigger (it isn't, but what the hell...)
After 3 months, you're only looking at 21 months of the original 24. Which is 14% (3/21*100).
After 6 months, it's 18. Which is 33% (6/18*100).
After 7 months it's 41%...
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Originally posted by malvolio View PostExcept it doesn't work like that. It's a rolling window, looking both ways, in the same area using substantially the same journey. And you don't have to be under 40%, just not spend a continuous 24 months from wherever you are at the moment. Go read the link I posted earlier.
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Originally posted by Acme Thunderer View PostBy my maths it would have to nearly 15 months away... Remember you need to get below 40% of the past 2 years. Or in other words work 60% of the time elsewhere, 60% of 24 months = 14.4 months.
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Originally posted by BolshieBastard View Post9 to 12 months? Bulltulip.
A single 3 monther at another geographical location is enough of a break. If you want more comfort, 6 months.
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