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If due to leaving the country you are only going to work part of the current tax year then you should be be due a refund of some or maybe even all of the taxes you've paid this tax year.elayaraja79 wrote:Thanks for your help.What about taxes i have paid while i was working here? Can I get back the tax money I paid?
Thanks
That would be the pension portion transfered to another pension scheme I reckon. Haven't read it in detail.Blackwater1 wrote:You may also request for a NI rebate,study this-
http://www.nirebateonline.com/
Yes. From state pension scheme to a private pension fund.Wanderer wrote:That would be the pension portion transfered to another pension scheme I reckon. Haven't read it in detail.Blackwater1 wrote:You may also request for a NI rebate,study this-
http://www.nirebateonline.com/
Can you explain please, the whole basis of PAYE is that assuming the tax code is correct, the correct amount of tax is deducted every month, it self adjusts if something goes out of kilter, and I would say in my experience it's correct 99.99% of the time. In your example above, I can't see how there is any tax rebate due.djb123 wrote:Here's how you claim any taxes that you are due back.
http://search2.hmrc.gov.uk/kbroker/hmrc ... formId=766
Basically the amount you could be due assuming you have the normal tax code (647) and pay basic rate tax only (20%) is about £108 for every month until the end of the tax (April 5th), though the amount you will get back will be limited to the amount you've paid this tax year.
No doubt after a sizeable commission deducted by the website people when you can do it yourself....sushdmehta wrote:Yes. From state pension scheme to a private pension fund.Wanderer wrote:That would be the pension portion transfered to another pension scheme I reckon. Haven't read it in detail.Blackwater1 wrote:You may also request for a NI rebate,study this-
http://www.nirebateonline.com/
regards
It works fine if you work the whole year, but not if you only work the first few months and then stop working - it can't self-adjust.Wanderer wrote:Can you explain please, the whole basis of PAYE is that assuming the tax code is correct, the correct amount of tax is deducted every month, it self adjusts if something goes out of kilter, and I would say in my experience it's correct 99.99% of the time. In your example above, I can't see how there is any tax rebate due.djb123 wrote:Here's how you claim any taxes that you are due back.
http://search2.hmrc.gov.uk/kbroker/hmrc ... formId=766
Basically the amount you could be due assuming you have the normal tax code (647) and pay basic rate tax only (20%) is about £108 for every month until the end of the tax (April 5th), though the amount you will get back will be limited to the amount you've paid this tax year.
Ahh, now I get you - I was assuming the person in question would stop work and leave immediately...djb123 wrote:It works fine if you work the whole year, but not if you only work the first few months and then stop working - it can't self-adjust.Wanderer wrote:Can you explain please, the whole basis of PAYE is that assuming the tax code is correct, the correct amount of tax is deducted every month, it self adjusts if something goes out of kilter, and I would say in my experience it's correct 99.99% of the time. In your example above, I can't see how there is any tax rebate due.djb123 wrote:Here's how you claim any taxes that you are due back.
http://search2.hmrc.gov.uk/kbroker/hmrc ... formId=766
Basically the amount you could be due assuming you have the normal tax code (647) and pay basic rate tax only (20%) is about £108 for every month until the end of the tax (April 5th), though the amount you will get back will be limited to the amount you've paid this tax year.
I don't think that it would matter if they did leave the UK straightaway, as I don't think the UK income tax personal allowance is reduced if you are not resident in the UK for the whole of the tax year.Wanderer wrote:Ahh, now I get you - I was assuming the person in question would stop work and leave immediately...djb123 wrote:It works fine if you work the whole year, but not if you only work the first few months and then stop working - it can't self-adjust.Wanderer wrote:Can you explain please, the whole basis of PAYE is that assuming the tax code is correct, the correct amount of tax is deducted every month, it self adjusts if something goes out of kilter, and I would say in my experience it's correct 99.99% of the time. In your example above, I can't see how there is any tax rebate due.djb123 wrote:Here's how you claim any taxes that you are due back.
http://search2.hmrc.gov.uk/kbroker/hmrc ... formId=766
Basically the amount you could be due assuming you have the normal tax code (647) and pay basic rate tax only (20%) is about £108 for every month until the end of the tax (April 5th), though the amount you will get back will be limited to the amount you've paid this tax year.
I think it would - I think PAYE does self-adjust if you start work later in the tax year. Mind u I know it doesn't make the adjustments all at once so you may be right.djb123 wrote:I don't think that it would matter if they did leave the UK straightaway, as I don't think the UK income tax personal allowance is reduced if you are not resident in the UK for the whole of the tax year.Wanderer wrote:Ahh, now I get you - I was assuming the person in question would stop work and leave immediately...djb123 wrote:It works fine if you work the whole year, but not if you only work the first few months and then stop working - it can't self-adjust.Wanderer wrote:
Can you explain please, the whole basis of PAYE is that assuming the tax code is correct, the correct amount of tax is deducted every month, it self adjusts if something goes out of kilter, and I would say in my experience it's correct 99.99% of the time. In your example above, I can't see how there is any tax rebate due.