By Toby Cotton on Small Business – Advice and Ideas for UK Small Businesses and SMEs
Dividends are a great way to extract profits from a company to pay shareholders, including directors, and there can be many tax advantageous points to it. But with any extraction, proper procedures need to be in place to ensure they are legal and fair.
Many small company director/shareholders decide to take a mixture of salary and dividends making use of the basic rate band in order to reduce tax. This is usually done by taking salary up to the minimum before you pay National Insurance or PAYE, and then top up with dividends as the current rate is 7.5 per cent on dividends up to the basic rate band. Helpfully, the first £2,000 of dividends extracted individually is covered by the dividend allowance with no tax to pay.
>See also: Forming a company: Choose your trading type
Before any dividends are to be declared, they must be checked to the articles of association to ensure that the internal rules of the company are kept in terms of who can approve these dividends and their proportions. Dividends will be approved via a board meeting.
There are two different types of
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Hot Business News Today
Paying dividends to directors
by Toby Cotton • • 0 Comments
By Toby Cotton on Small Business – Advice and Ideas for UK Small Businesses and SMEs
Dividends are a great way to extract profits from a company to pay shareholders, including directors, and there can be many tax advantageous points to it. But with any extraction, proper procedures need to be in place to ensure they are legal and fair.
Many small company director/shareholders decide to take a mixture of salary and dividends making use of the basic rate band in order to reduce tax. This is usually done by taking salary up to the minimum before you pay National Insurance or PAYE, and then top up with dividends as the current rate is 7.5 per cent on dividends up to the basic rate band. Helpfully, the first £2,000 of dividends extracted individually is covered by the dividend allowance with no tax to pay.
>See also: Forming a company: Choose your trading type
Before any dividends are to be declared, they must be checked to the articles of association to ensure that the internal rules of the company are kept in terms of who can approve these dividends and their proportions. Dividends will be approved via a board meeting.
There are two different types of
Hot Business News Today
Small business owners who duck out of repaying Covid debt face ban
by Timothy Adler • • 0 Comments
Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Small business owners who wind up their companies to avoid having to repay Covid debt could be banned from being company directors.
Owner-directors found guilty of abusing insolvency procedures to duck out of having to repay Covid debt taken out by their small business could be banned for up to 15 years.
About 1.5m small businesses have taken out Bounce Back Loans through a scheme that offered up to £50,000 interest free for a year.
>See also: Nearly two thirds of Bounce Back Loans could go bad, says government
And the new beefed-up Insolvency Service will be able to investigate retrospectively to already wound-up companies.
The government promised to clamp down on any potential fraud in repaying emergency Covid-19 loans in the Budget earlier this year.
Officials are keen to sew up the insolvency loophole to curb any losses to the taxpayer as banks start to charge interest or seek to recoup loans once the repayment holidays on the government-backed schemes end.
>See also: Half of small businesses will never repay Bounce Back Loans, warn banks
Dissolution via strike-off or voluntary liquidation is only supposed to be used by a small business without a prior insolvency and only when the company
Hot Business News Today
Small business owners who duck out of repaying Covid debt face ban
by Timothy Adler • • 0 Comments
Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Small business owners who wind up their companies to avoid having to repay Covid debt could be banned from being company directors.
Owner-directors found guilty of abusing insolvency procedures to duck out of having to repay Covid debt taken out by their small business could be banned for up to 15 years.
About 1.5m small businesses have taken out Bounce Back Loans through a scheme that offered up to £50,000 interest free for a year.
>See also: Nearly two thirds of Bounce Back Loans could go bad, says government
And the new beefed-up Insolvency Service will be able to investigate retrospectively to already wound-up companies.
The government promised to clamp down on any potential fraud in repaying emergency Covid-19 loans in the Budget earlier this year.
Officials are keen to sew up the insolvency loophole to curb any losses to the taxpayer as banks start to charge interest or seek to recoup loans once the repayment holidays on the government-backed schemes end.
>See also: Half of small businesses will never repay Bounce Back Loans, warn banks
Dissolution via strike-off or voluntary liquidation is only supposed to be used by a small business without a prior insolvency and only when the company
Hot Business News Today
Rishi Sunak urged to help self-employed company directors
by Timothy Adler • • 0 Comments
Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Lobbyists, trade associations and experts have joined forces to urge Rishi Sunak to help company directors frozen out of government Covid-19 support.
A consortium of professional bodies has urged the chancellor to consider proposals for a “Directors Income Support Scheme” (DISS), which would mirror the Self-employment Income Support Scheme (SEISS) under which sole traders can claim up to £2,500 per month.
This is a last-ditch attempt for the Treasury to change its mind before this week’s Spending Review.
>See also: When and where to apply for the new 80% self-employed grant
Until now the Treasury has balked at helping self-employed directors of limited companies who pay themselves in dividends, claiming it would be too difficult to separate company income from passive income, such as property and shares.
This is despite company directors paying themselves through through dividends being the standard accounting structure used by around 2m small UK limited companies, ranging from those with sole owner directors to micro businesses, which collectively employ 7.5m people.
Some see the Treasury’s mulishness as a disguised attack by HMRC on self-employed company directors, who often pay less into National Insurance and pay corporation tax instead of income tax.
It is estimated that around
Hot Business News Today
Rishi Sunak urged to help self-employed company directors
by Timothy Adler • • 0 Comments
Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Lobbyists, trade associations and experts have joined forces to urge Rishi Sunak to help company directors frozen out of government Covid-19 support.
A consortium of professional bodies has urged the chancellor to consider proposals for a “Directors Income Support Scheme” (DISS), which would mirror the Self-employment Income Support Scheme (SEISS) under which sole traders can claim up to £2,500 per month.
This is a last-ditch attempt for the Treasury to change its mind before this week’s Spending Review.
>See also: When and where to apply for the new 80% self-employed grant
Until now the Treasury has balked at helping self-employed directors of limited companies who pay themselves in dividends, claiming it would be too difficult to separate company income from passive income, such as property and shares.
This is despite company directors paying themselves through through dividends being the standard accounting structure used by around 2m small UK limited companies, ranging from those with sole owner directors to micro businesses, which collectively employ 7.5m people.
Some see the Treasury’s mulishness as a disguised attack by HMRC on self-employed company directors, who often pay less into National Insurance and pay corporation tax instead of income tax.
It is estimated that around
Hot Business News Today
Small business minister trying to help owner-directors hit by coronavirus
by Timothy Adler • • 0 Comments
Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Small business minister Paul Scully is trying to help the 1.6m owner-directors shut out of coronavirus government business support schemes.
Although Treasury has said that owner-directors of small businesses could furlough themselves through the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme, as a company director you can only pay yourself up to £800 through PAYE – which means you have to take the balance of salary as dividends.
For somebody earning £800 per month through PAYE, this would equate to a monthly income of £640.
Mr Scully, speaking during a webinar hosted by accountancy software firm Intuit on Wednesday, he wanted to get money “asap” to owner-directors who “are falling between the cracks” of government coronavirus schemes.
However, the problem is, according to Mr Scully, that the tax system doesn’t differentiate between dividends as part of pay and dividends earned as passive investment income from shares.
There is also a public perception issue as government would not want to be seen to be rewarding company directors who already pay less tax than those paying in through PAYE. Basic tax on dividends is 7.5 per cent; the basic income tax rate is 20 per cent on top of national insurance contributions.
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