Drago
Legendary Member
- Location
- Suburban Poshshire
What, his accountant that works down the cycle shop?I'd ask the accountant you'll presumably be engaging when you need to start doing self-assessment about the rules & regs![]()
What, his accountant that works down the cycle shop?I'd ask the accountant you'll presumably be engaging when you need to start doing self-assessment about the rules & regs![]()
I don't know why he can't just buy himself a bike. Being a partner or director he's probably not short of a £1 or two, just short on decency and doing the right thing like paying taxes as he should. Typical business owner or some one used to getting others to subsidise their lifestyle.
But he's just told all of us and the rest of the internet that he plans to set up a tax dodge.
Most small business owners would earn more working for a company or public sector, more should have a go and find out what it is like, bit angry as I just had another small business go bankrupt on me this moring oweing over £1,000.
Get your creditors claim into the administrators in order to get half a chance of getting some money back from the company from any remaining cash and proceeds of assets sold.
What you floated out is not "using the current tax rules". It's misrepresenting the facts to illegally reduce the tax burden.
To use your example, C2W is a very specific piece of tax legislation. Use it, it's 100% legal. But the ideas you've suggested are not legal.
(Qualified accountant, Finance Director of several companies. Know what I'm talking about!)
I stopped paying myself a salary or dividends for 2 years for the same reason. I just took a few director's loans when the need arose.My ex boss once told me how he engineered losses in the business to ensure his daughters received state support to attend uni. Fraud.
Agreed, one person's tax avoidance is another's prudent tax planning.
I stopped paying myself a salary or dividends for 2 years for the same reason. I just took a few director's loans when the need arose.
Before I set up my own company, I was working for the man paying around £28k a year in income tax. I looked at it as levelling out.No doubt what you did was legal , but equally no doubt that it was immoral.
It's only the extremely wealthy who seem to have the ability to do these tax dodges and such, isn't it? Funny that.Before I set up my own company, I was working for the man paying around £28k a year in income tax. I looked at it as levelling out.![]()
extremely wealthy ? not me, just careful with my money.It's only the extremely wealthy who seem to have the ability to do these tax dodges and such, isn't it? Funny that.
You must've been earning a solid amount to pay £28k income tax however (£100k a year?)extremely wealthy ? not me, just careful with my money.
It's a fair point. Many people earn less than the mentioned tax bill. Quibbling about the tax bill for that amount seems a bit unreasonable. I'm not complaining about someone earning the amount needed to generate that tax liability, but to complain and 'cheat' because of the tax when your job/earnings put you in such an advantaged position is bordering on immoral.You must've been earning a solid amount to pay £28k income tax however