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Previously on "How do you calculate IR35 take home pay when calculators contradict each other?"

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  • eek
    replied
    Originally posted by hugebrain View Post
    Gibberish with added implausible stupidity
    FTFY

    But let's do the calculation for the OP

    Agency fee £450 * 228 = £102,680
    Umbrella margin £1200
    Apprenticeship Levy ~ £440
    Employer NI ~ £12000

    Gross pay ~ £89040
    Gross Pay 100% £89,040 £7,420 £1,712.31
    Tax free allowance 14% £12,579 £1,048.25 £241.90
    Total taxable 85% £76,461 £6,371.75 £1,470.40
    Total Tax Due 25% £23,044.40 £1,920.37 £443.16
    20% rate 8% £7,540 £628.33 £145
    40% rate 17% £15,504.40 £1,292.03 £298.16
    45% rate 0% £0 £0 £0
    Student Loan 0% £0 £0 £0
    National Insurance 5% £5,299.40 £441.62 £101.91
    Total Deductions 31% £28,343.80 £2,361.98 £545.07
    Net Wage 68% £60,696.20 £5,058.02 £1,167.23
    From https://listentotaxman.com/?year=202...e=1&ingr=89040 for 2023/4

    Leave a comment:


  • hugebrain
    replied
    Basically inside IR35 you pay less tax, but it’s all jam tomorrow.

    For the first year you can pop 160,000 into your pension (more now?) so it’s not too bad, but then minimum wage just pays for your ISA and leaves you with nothing to live on. But the second year it starts to get crazy. You are faced with around 100 grand in tax which means you have to pop around 330,000 in your venture capital trust to stay paying zero income tax.

    Big dent in your war chest. If you manage to survive 5 years then your venture capital trusts start paying out tons of tax-free lolly and everything is fine again. But I’d recommend not doing more than a couple of years in a row inside IR35, because you really have to live off your savings while you are doing it. So just keep looking for a proper contract while you suffer through the almost-permie phase.

    Leave a comment:


  • milanbenes
    replied
    now that I am back io contracting and living in the Euro zone with British and Euro passports, I can apply for these Hybrid contracts in the UK which are inside IR35 and since I am not in Blighty I can take an inside IR35 contract and don't have to be IR35 lol

    how cool is that

    Milan

    Milan

    Leave a comment:


  • DoctorStrangelove
    replied
    Originally posted by northernladuk View Post
    And maybe check which part of the forums you are posting in. As one glance will tell you there isn't a single professional post in the his section, for a good reason.
    Along with which: do you like films about gladiators?

    Have you bled the radiators?

    Leave a comment:


  • Protagoras
    replied
    Originally posted by sezchwarn View Post
    My calculations are on £450 per day, inside IR35, you get £102k take home (assuming 228 days per year). And on that, around £28k personal tax and £6k employee NI. Meaning a take-home of £68k or £5.6k per month.

    Have I got it right?
    There needs to be at least an assumption about how much you're allowing for pension contributions.

    If you want a good basis of estimate, I'd suggest that you ask a well rated umbrella company for an illustration.


    Leave a comment:


  • northernladuk
    replied
    And maybe check which part of the forums you are posting in. As one glance will tell you there isn't a single professional post in the his section, for a good reason.

    General

    All hope abandon ye who enter here. Seriously.

    Leave a comment:


  • northernladuk
    replied
    Originally posted by sezchwarn View Post

    What's the truth?
    My calculations are on £450 per day, inside IR35, you get £102k take home (assuming 228 days per year). And on that, around £28k personal tax and £6k employee NI. Meaning a take-home of £68k or £5.6k per month.

    Have I got it right?
    There isn't one and we haven't managed to get anything thats even remotely accurate due to many factors people negate to factor in when asking us. We've been through this a ton of times so can't really help. Personally I'd look at other factors when deciding which to take. It's pretty rare that two gig are exactly the same and rate/pay is the only differentiator.

    Leave a comment:


  • eek
    replied
    Originally posted by hobnob View Post

    The bit about 5% expenses is very out of date, so ignore that. Basically, if you're inside IR35 then you can't claim expenses (unless the client will reimburse you).
    Even then unless the umbrella agrees thew payment is an expense it could be treated as income on which PAYE tax is due - double / triple check before agreeing any contract where expenses are being paid.

    Leave a comment:


  • eek
    replied
    Originally posted by ladymuck View Post

    Great, and did they come with a solution to the problem that is entirely of their own making? Thought not.
    I've heard that guidance is coming that will make things clear - including things like the Key Information Document must be based on the agency rate and not a generic minimum wage or similar.

    It will also need to be provided by the agency directly.

    Leave a comment:


  • ladymuck
    replied
    Originally posted by eek View Post

    even the Government have admitted that Key Information Documents don't work.
    Great, and did they come with a solution to the problem that is entirely of their own making? Thought not.

    Leave a comment:


  • eek
    replied
    Originally posted by hobnob View Post
    For an inside contract, you should get a Key Information Document from the agency. In particular, the assignment rate will include employer's NI and the apprenticeship levy, whereas your gross pay is what's left after that. See:
    Working through an umbrella company - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
    So, in your example of £450/day, you need to know which figure that is.
    even the Government have admitted that Key Information Documents don't work.

    Leave a comment:


  • hobnob
    replied
    First up, I recommend reading through the articles in the right-hand margin, particularly the ones for IR35.

    Also, bear in mind that the new budget is on Wednesday (15th March), and that will give you more accurate figures for the next financial year (e.g. tax bands).

    Take home pay for an outside IR35 contract depends on various factors:
    * Are you planning to drain all available money out of the company account, or leave a float (warchest) to cover you when you're on the bench?
    * What expenses does your limited company have (e.g. accountancy fees and software licensing)?
    * How do you want to split your income between salary and dividends?

    For an inside contract, you should get a Key Information Document from the agency. In particular, the assignment rate will include employer's NI and the apprenticeship levy, whereas your gross pay is what's left after that. See:
    Working through an umbrella company - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
    So, in your example of £450/day, you need to know which figure that is.

    In my experience, umbrella companies tended to overestimate the amount of income tax that I'd owe by the end of the year, so I had to claim a rebate via my SATR. It all evens out in the end, but you might not get the predicted take-home pay each month.

    The bit about 5% expenses is very out of date, so ignore that. Basically, if you're inside IR35 then you can't claim expenses (unless the client will reimburse you).

    Pension contributions are another factor which is relevant to inside and outside contracts, but that's for you to decide.

    Leave a comment:


  • ladymuck
    replied
    Depends on whether the £450 is the assignment rate or gross rate.

    Have you factored in umbrella costs or are you expecting to be on agency payroll? Are you intending to pay anything into a pension?

    Leave a comment:


  • sadkingbilly
    replied
    that you LPM1 ?

    Leave a comment:


  • How do you calculate IR35 take home pay when calculators contradict each other?

    I'm trying to work out for myself what Inside vs Outside IR35 looks like in terms of take-home pay because there don't seem to be reliable sources online.

    Consider Inside IR35 and £450 per day; contractorcalculator.co.uk tells you you'll take home £4500 a month. ITcontracting.com says £5000 and mentions Empoyers NI. Other websites say you don't pay Employers NI, only employee NI. Some say you get to take 5% off for expenses, others say not.

    So they all contradict each other. Isn't it their job to get this right? It seems like they've put next to no effort into researching it properly.

    What's the truth?
    My calculations are on £450 per day, inside IR35, you get £102k take home (assuming 228 days per year). And on that, around £28k personal tax and £6k employee NI. Meaning a take-home of £68k or £5.6k per month.

    Have I got it right?

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