Nervous Newbie
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There is a difference between sharing dividend with a partner and sharing with a wife. There's a pretty solid legal precedent for the latter. But what you've proposed would probably fly with a partner as well.
There is NOTHING wrong with your plan B. I don't know who said this is tax avoidance, but company pension contributions are entirely acceptable. In fact, if Mrs is doing the book-keeping, you could and arguably should make her a director and be making a pension contribution for her. If all the pension is in your name then at retirement all the income will be in your name, which isn't very tax efficient.
Both are fine. You can afford an accountant, go get one!
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Where is the benefit? None, really, if he is going to be thrown inside IR35 by all his clients.
If not, if he has even one outside IR35 gig every two years, having a limited company will be well worth it.
Even in the public sector not every contract was thrown inside IR35, and the private sector is likely to be more cost-conscious and slower to make blanket assessments.
In short, unless every contract is dragged into IR35, which is highly unlikely, your comment adds nothing to this thread. Even if every contract is inside, there's the liability protection.
Where is the benefit? Well, for one, in addition to the dividend allowance he's going to be able to use up his wife's basic rate band. That alone is a substantive benefit. CT plus Div Tax is lower than IT plus ERNI plus EENI. Company pension contributions don't incur any tax, self-employed pension contributions still incur NI. The ability to avoid the higher rate band and hold funds in reserve for bench time. Limited liability.
That's a pretty substantial list of benefits, thousands of pounds a year, if he's outside IR35.
Still gathering requirements...
As long as she is really doing the "bookkeeping" and you can prove it you are fine![]()
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Contractor Among Contractors
For the sake of pedantry, the above often isn't true (but admittedly tax savings can be very modest). Key thing is NIC thresholds are available per job, rather than cumulative across all employments. So even if someone earns £20-25k/year elsewhere, and suffers NICs as well as PAYE on that, they can have another job paying up to £702/month, suffering no NICs (but it would still suffer PAYE).
So oversimplifying a little bit, and assuming basic rate taxpayer, you can end up in the situation where comparison is:
- salary = 20% personal tax
- dividends = 19% corporation tax + 7.5% personal tax (assuming dividends will go beyond £2k dividend allowance).
Salary marginally wins. Of course it's far more significant where someone doesn't have any other salary, as then it's 0% personal tax vs 19% corporation tax.