A Limited Company or not?
The Inland Revenue (IR) would like every worker in the country
to be employed under PAYE. Why? Because that way they receive
the full 40% tax deduction and they receive it monthly. Additionally,
the employer undertakes all PAYE administration so the cost/benefit
relationship to the Treasury is very favourable.
Those who are in business on their own account however are
able to deduct expenses and pay their tax in six-monthly instalments.
Additionally the IR has to set up a self-assessment file and
spend time logging this data and ‘approving’ these
Returns. The cost/benefit relationship to the Treasury has
obviously dropped.
If you therefore leave employment and commence as a contractor,
you have to show that you are in business on your own account
otherwise the IR will ‘deem’ that you are still
an employee and tax you as such.
Whether you have a Limited Company or not is therefore vital.
Limited Companies are prima facie trading entities. Their
raison d’etre is to be in business and make profits.
The worker owns the business and directs and controls how
the entity will manage itself in the market, bringing rewards
to the owner according to how successful it is.
Other entities offered to Contractors such as umbrella companies,
composite companies and managed companies are not owned, controlled
or managed by the worker, but by someone else (see bullet
points below).
The IR therefore have long held the view, as recently published
in Gordon Brown’s pre-budget report on the 6th December
2006, that such Managed Service Company Schemes (MSC) are
not true businesses, at least as far as the worker is concerned,
hence the long expected announcement that PAYE will, from
April 2007, have to be deducted from those ‘rewards’
paid to the worker.
The only true trading vehicle for a Contractor is therefore
within a Limited Company, and as long as the nature of your
working relationship is outside of IR35, as verified in your
contract, then only that portion of your reward you choose
to take as salary, will be subject to PAYE.
- Umbrella Companies are vehicles where you are one of
perhaps several hundred workers and where you are awarded
expenses on top of a small salary with the remainder being
paid to you as dividends. Your overall net reward is large,
as is the management fee.
- Composite Companies are similar to but smaller than Umbrella
Companies with perhaps only 20 workers; thereby ensuring
the ‘holding’ company remains a small company
for tax purposes. (Small companies pay less corporation
tax than large companies)
- A managed Company is like the above but with only one
worker.
- A Limited Company is owned, controlled and managed by
the worker, usually with the assistance of an Accountant.
There are regulations and deadlines to comply with but the
accountants fee is considerably lower than that of a managed
company.
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