Small businesses call for HMRC to delay IR35 tax change

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Small businesses have called for the Treasury to delay its controversial IR35 tax change, which is meant to clampdown on employees passing themselves off as freelancers in order to avoid tax.
The government has already restricted freelancers working full-time in the public sector as contractors, which means they pay less tax than equivalent employees. As employers are the ones who face penalties if they categorise full-time contractors wrongly, it makes hiring sole traders less appealing.
>See also: How to wind up your personal service company ahead of IR35 legislation
Now the Treasury wants to extend its IR35 legislation to the private sector in April 2020.
Mike Cherry, national chairman of the FSB, said: “The self-employed certainly don’t need an IR35 rule change that makes hiring contractors less attractive. We’ve already heard noises from big corporates to indicate that, if this change does take effect in April as planned, they’ll pull the plug on sole traders.
“Common sense dictates that a delay to the April roll-out of these rules is now needed.”
Back in September, chartered accountants also called for the IR35 tax change to be delayed. The Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW) said the date

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