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Personal Pension Contributions and Effect on Dividend Payments at 7.5% Rate

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    #11
    Covering drawings with dividend declaration

    My understanding is that dividends are declared to cover drawings from the company which are not allowed as expenses. The dividend tax seems to have muddied the waters now. So what would the effect be if the dividend was under declared and also over declared?

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      #12
      Originally posted by JohntheBike View Post
      My understanding is that dividends are declared to cover drawings from the company which are not allowed as expenses.
      No. Dividends are profits being paid to shareholders.


      Originally posted by JohntheBike View Post
      The dividend tax seems to have muddied the waters now.
      Really????


      Originally posted by JohntheBike View Post
      So what would the effect be if the dividend was under declared and also over declared?
      You're going to have to ask that question in a way which makes sense.
      See You Next Tuesday

      Comment


        #13
        Originally posted by Lance View Post
        No. Dividends are profits being paid to shareholders.


        Really????


        You're going to have to ask that question in a way which makes sense.
        You're going to have to ask that question in a way which makes sense
        OK, given that my perception appears to be wrong regarding dividends, I don't know how to ask the question correctly, but I'll try. If the dividend declared is greater than the profit actually earned, what would the consequence be and vice versa, i.e. if the dividend declared is less than the profits earned, what are the consequences? Additionally, is either course of action illegal?

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          #14
          Dividends should only be declared up to a maximum of the profits made by the company (not forgetting to allow for the tax due on those profits.) These profits may be from the current or previous tax year (in which case the CT may not yet have been paid) or retained profits from previous years (in which case it will have been.)

          If dividends are declared which exceed the post-tax profits available, they should be reclassified as shareholder/director loans. This may have tax consequences on the individuals concerned.

          There is no problem whatsoever with "underpaying" dividends. You don't have to distribute every last available penny as dividends - it can just be held in the company until required. There is no dividend tax on the profits thus retained unless and until they are paid as dividends.

          Finally, the sentence "dividends are declared to cover drawings from the company which are not allowed as expenses" is rather oddly worded. The drawing should be a consequence of the declaration of a dividend, not vice versa.
          Last edited by Amanensia; 2 December 2019, 12:46.

          Comment


            #15
            Originally posted by Amanensia View Post
            Dividends should only be declared up to a maximum of the profits made by the company (not forgetting to allow for the tax due on those profits.) These profits may be from the current or previous tax year (in which case the CT may not yet have been paid) or retained profits from previous years (in which case it will have been.)

            If dividends are declared which exceed the post-tax profits available, they should be reclassified as shareholder/director loans. This may have tax consequences on the individuals concerned.

            There is no problem whatsoever with "underpaying" dividends. You don't have to distribute every last available penny as dividends - it can just be held in the company until required. There is no dividend tax on the profits thus retained unless and until they are paid as dividends.

            Finally, the sentence "dividends are declared to cover drawings from the company which are not allowed as expenses" is rather oddly worded. The drawing should be a consequence of the declaration of a dividend, not vice versa.
            OK, thanks for the explanation. Clearly I take the advice of my accountants as to how much dividend to declare.

            Comment


              #16
              Originally posted by JohntheBike View Post
              OK, given that my perception appears to be wrong regarding dividends, I don't know how to ask the question correctly, but I'll try. If the dividend declared is greater than the profit actually earned, what would the consequence be and vice versa, i.e. if the dividend declared is less than the profits earned, what are the consequences? Additionally, is either course of action illegal?
              If a dividend is declared that is greater than the sum of current profit and any retained profit, minus any corporation tax liability, it is illegal.
              The consequences are unlikely to be a a problem unless you fail to pay CT or go bankrupt.
              There is no minimum dividend so you can go below that to keep you under a tax threshold on personal tax.
              The consequences of NOT doing this is you could pay more personal tax.

              How long have you been contracting? You give the impression that it's been a long time, but this is a really basic question, and demonstrates a staggering level of ignorance.
              See You Next Tuesday

              Comment


                #17
                Originally posted by Lance View Post
                If a dividend is declared that is greater than the sum of current profit and any retained profit, minus any corporation tax liability, it is illegal.
                The consequences are unlikely to be a a problem unless you fail to pay CT or go bankrupt.
                There is no minimum dividend so you can go below that to keep you under a tax threshold on personal tax.
                The consequences of NOT doing this is you could pay more personal tax.

                How long have you been contracting? You give the impression that it's been a long time, but this is a really basic question, and demonstrates a staggering level of ignorance.
                I've been contracting for 23 years and I declare what dividend my accountant tells me to. Perhaps my thinking has been too simplistic.

                Clearly I'm not an accountant, and so don't have an appreciation of the finer points of company accounting laws, but I always remind him that I wish to continue my business in the most appropriate legal way. To that end, I have always paid all tax bills in full and on time.

                However, I am aware that companies can report a loss year in year out and still be allowed to trade. However, there must always be an operating profit. Clearly in a simplistic way, unless there is a bank overdraft, companies cannot spend more money that they earn. So, in effect should always show an operating profit.

                Again in a simplistic way, as long as the company retains sufficient funds to cover its tax liabilities at any one point in time, then clearly it is solvent and trading correctly. Although companies are not obliged to pay CT until 9 months after their year end, my understanding is that the CT due must in theory be in the company funds the day after the year end.

                Please correct me if my perceptions are wrong.

                Comment


                  #18
                  Originally posted by JohntheBike View Post
                  Again in a simplistic way, as long as the company retains sufficient funds to cover its tax liabilities at any one point in time, then clearly it is solvent and trading correctly. Although companies are not obliged to pay CT until 9 months after their year end, my understanding is that the CT due must in theory be in the company funds the day after the year end.

                  Please correct me if my perceptions are wrong.
                  Yes, the CT should be in the company funds the day after the year end. Not sure about the legality but practically they should be in the company funds from the time the profit is earned.

                  If you have revenue of £10K in month one of your year, and pay £1K in salary and other expenses, you have £9K in profit. That £9K will incur approximately £1.7K of CT. If you are running your business with any sense at all, you'll put that £1.7K into a company savings account, and leave it there for 20 months, and do the same with every month's profit. You should never pay out dividends that exceed the after-tax profit, even if the tax isn't due yet.

                  Comment


                    #19
                    Oh, and are you familiar with the name Darren Upton? The attitude to an accountant should be "Trust but verify." That means learning enough to understand his advice, not just slavishly following it.

                    Comment


                      #20
                      Correct

                      Simple answer, yes you could have paid yourself more dividends at 7.5%

                      Pension just like gift aid increases your basic rate bracket so your bracket would increase and no longer be £46,350 for 18/19.


                      Originally posted by Paralytic View Post
                      (Before anyone says speak to your accountant, this is for my self-assessment, not for my PSC, and I do my own personal finances)
                      (Before anyway says speak to an accountant anyway, then please move on - that is what the internet is for)

                      I'm looking at my 2018-19 self-assessment and trying to work out what Dividend I paid myself (sorry, could have paid myself ) on March 31st 2019, so as to maximise the Dividend amount but limit the tax due to the 7.5% rate.

                      In January 2019, I paid (from personal funds) the max amount I could into my Personal Pension based on my earned income. This was £11,850 gross, matching my salary for that tax year. I paid £9,480 (net amount) from my personal bank account and my pension provider topped it up with the tax relief.

                      The question is, in my self assessment tax return, there is the field that asks for:

                      "Payments to registered pension schemes (Also known as PPR) where basic tax relief will be claimed by your pension provider (called Relief at source). Enter the payments and basic tax rate"

                      The help page for that field is here: HMRC: Help

                      When I enter the gross £11,850 amount here, and amend the rest of my return, it effectively means I can (sorry, could have ) paid myself and additional £11,850 in dividends for the 2019-2020 tax year at the 7.5% tax rate.

                      Is that right? I think it is, but have this niggling doubt since the £11,850 already contains the 20% tax relief credit?

                      Adding the pension amount also adds this commentary to the "Full Calculation" page on the tax return



                      Am I missing something here?

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