Originally posted by oilboil
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Reply to: BBC article on micro-Ltds
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Previously on "BBC article on micro-Ltds"
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostCould you take your IR35 witterings to another thread
At least NLUK was brief with his stock "what did your accountant say" responses. These IR35 ramblings are just sooooooooo long and boring
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Originally posted by SussexSeagull View PostAs someone on LinkedIn said the new criteria for IR35 determinations should be:
I got help from a government scheme: Inside
I didn't get help from a government scheme: Outside
(before anyone lays into the legalities of it I fully appreciate they were being flippant but I understand the sentiment behind it).
But realistically the government will pass the IR35 amendment, even more so now as they're going to be needing even more tax revenue after all these grants, so I definitely will take any grants I am legally entitled too.
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Originally posted by oilboil View PostAre they, because they are exactly my current real world example having taken many months of this year. How about you try to stop thinking that everyone is like you
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Originally posted by elsergiovolador View PostWhy don't you compare real life values? For example 70k salary versus 70k revenue (minus accounting, insurance, office, equipment and other costs)?
Such comparisons like yours are unhelpful and give people wrong image.
Speaking of real life, you might like to visit the real world...
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Originally posted by oilboil View PostI think you are focussing on the wrong part here, Limited Companies do still get an advantage through DIV instead of PAYE
To make calcs easier I've assumed you paid a base salary of £12,500 and a DIVI of £2k already (the tax free DIVIDEND)
So you wanted to disperse 20K of money to your employee (you) then there is a difference
PAYE
Income Tax 20% - £4,000
Employee NI 12% - £2,400
Employer NI 13.8% - £2,760
Total to GOV = £9,160
DIVIDEND ROUTE
Corp Tax 19% - £3,800
Dividend Tax 7.5% - £1,500
Total to GOV £5,300
NOW - If you were to argue that due to lack of sick pay, holiday pay, pension contributions and other benefits that the difference wasn't that great I'd agree, but on a pure TAX TAKE discussion there is a massive difference that gives contractors a big boost in raw take home cash (but no holiday/sick/benefits etc - so quickly eroded)
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Originally posted by elsergiovolador View PostWhy don't you compare real life values? For example 70k salary versus 70k revenue (minus accounting, insurance, office, equipment and other costs)?
Such comparisons like yours are unhelpful and give people wrong image.
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Originally posted by oilboil View PostNOW - If you were to argue that due to lack of sick pay, holiday pay, pension contributions and other benefits that the difference wasn't that great I'd agree, but on a pure TAX TAKE discussion there is a massive difference that gives contractors a big boost in raw take home cash (but no holiday/sick/benefits etc - so quickly eroded)
Such comparisons like yours are unhelpful and give people wrong image.
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Are you sure self-employed people pay double-NI? The comparison between SE and Ltd-divi is surely the more relevant one... also it would be useful to run it at low-ish income (say £25k gross), medium (50k?) and high (100k).
If I get time I'll run it but SE isn't an area I ever used.
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Originally posted by oliverson View PostExcept you forgot to mention that dividends come from profits, which have corporation tax applied to them, currently at 19%, before then having dividend tax applied at 7.5% (lower rate)
To make calcs easier I've assumed you paid a base salary of £12,500 and a DIVI of £2k already (the tax free DIVIDEND)
So you wanted to disperse 20K of money to your employee (you) then there is a difference
PAYE
Income Tax 20% - £4,000
Employee NI 12% - £2,400
Employer NI 13.8% - £2,760
Total to GOV = £9,160
DIVIDEND ROUTE
Corp Tax 19% - £3,800
Dividend Tax 7.5% - £1,500
Total to GOV £5,300
NOW - If you were to argue that due to lack of sick pay, holiday pay, pension contributions and other benefits that the difference wasn't that great I'd agree, but on a pure TAX TAKE discussion there is a massive difference that gives contractors a big boost in raw take home cash (but no holiday/sick/benefits etc - so quickly eroded)
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Originally posted by oliverson View PostExcept you forgot to mention that dividends come from profits, which have corporation tax applied to them, currently at 19%, before then having dividend tax applied at 7.5% (lower rate)
Originally posted by elsergiovolador View PostThe contractors I know also don't pay themselves 30k to be @ 7.5% after corp tax, but much more, therefore their tax bills are substantial.
I still think expecting to be taxed a a shareholder but get benefits as an employee is not right.
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Originally posted by oliverson View PostExcept you forgot to mention that dividends come from profits, which have corporation tax applied to them, currently at 19%, before then having dividend tax applied at 7.5% (lower rate)
If they believe contractors pay not enough tax, then there should be a better way to do it - for example increase the dividend tax, so it will match PAYE plus employers NI by pound
Improve PAYE so it is as easy to get a salary as dividend.
Lastly, merge income tax with NI.
I already listed three better ideas. Me detective mind tells me, the tax is not the reason IR35 is pushed through.
This is the same thing as talking about children safety when implementing censorship.
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Originally posted by Paralytic View PostPeople who have paid themselves dividends have benefited from hugely preferential tax treatment on a significant part of their income. Perhaps the treasury could allow such people to benefit from the scheme if they agree to (in future) back-pay tax at the equivalent level of an employee for all dividends paid in the last 3 years.
So, if you received, say, £30K dividends each year, for which you paid 7.5% tax, you can claim up to £2,500 per month now, based on your average income including dividends (capped, as per the employed/self-employed), but agree to owe the equivalent tax as if those dividends had been taken as salary.
So, you'd owe the tax man 12.5% on those dividends (assuming a simple case). It would not have to be paid now, but due over the next 3 years from 2021. It could be called the Dividend Charge.
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