Originally posted by forumuser
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Before the 'reform', if you'd done that and said you were inside, if HMRC came calling and you ended up in a tribunal, you could have said, 'Obviously I'm in business for myself, not an employee. I didn't even take that money out, my company used it to hire someone else and develop a product.' It wouldn't have guaranteed you'd win, but it would be a strong argument and unless you had been really stupid re: IR35, you'd have won your case.
With the 'reform' you don't even get to make the argument. The client decides, your tax fate is sealed. If the client decides 'wrong', HMRC will sort them out in a year or two.
If you want to build a business, you either have to find a large client that will work with you on a B2B relationship or find a small client, so you still get to make the determination.
Either that or work as an employee (real or de facto) and start your business out of personal funds and build it up that way. But that will also obviously be slower and more painful.
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