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John wrote:entrepreneur123, you are a Director of your company? As a Director you are the holder of an office in the company, and income as the holder of an office is taxable under PAYE, in the same way as an employee would be taxed.
Is a Director also an employee of the company? No, not unless they have been issued with a contract of employment, which would be unusual in a Director-controlled company.
Olasunkanmi wrote:@ entrepreneur123, why will you want to be an employee in your business when you are already a director in the same business and as a director you could get your payment through dividend which can be drawn from your business either monthly, quarterly or even yearly.
I assume that you are looking for a way of getting monthly salary out of your business, but bear in mind that if you then decide to get the salary as a payee, the salary is not part of your investment funds of 50k/200k so in my opinion, its just an unnecessary idea to get payment on payee as a director of a business on Tier1 entrepreneur visa.
Dividend income technically comes only after net profit is calculated. However, you can pay dividend on a monthly basis since accountants 'outward project' the entire financial year and then 'adjust' for the financial year as required from monthly balance statements.entrepreneur123 wrote:As a director you have two options to take salary, one is PAYE and one is dividends. Yes ofcourse i am not taking 50k or 200 k as my salary. but the money i am receiving from my clients, i will be taking that as PAYE plus dividends. As stated in above link, if director is taking money out from his company as PAYE, this does not make him employee of the company.... taking money as PAYE plus dividends is more tax efficient thats why i want to use PAYE.
vin123 wrote:Dividend income technically comes only after net profit is calculated. However, you can pay dividend on a monthly basis since accountants 'outward project' the entire financial year and then 'adjust' for the financial year as required from monthly balance statements.entrepreneur123 wrote:As a director you have two options to take salary, one is PAYE and one is dividends. Yes ofcourse i am not taking 50k or 200 k as my salary. but the money i am receiving from my clients, i will be taking that as PAYE plus dividends. As stated in above link, if director is taking money out from his company as PAYE, this does not make him employee of the company.... taking money as PAYE plus dividends is more tax efficient thats why i want to use PAYE.
If you take a salary under PAYE, then company has to pay the PAYE + NIC contribution on behalf of you, as an employee.
There is no ideal combination to split income from Salary (PAYE) & Dividends.
However, since there is no NIC required on dividends + there is no double taxation on dividends, that gives you a bit of tax advantage if the majority of income is from dividend payments.
As a rough figure: 2013-2014 FY
You can take up to £41450 per year(gross) on Salary + Dividend combination on the base tax rate of 20%. Example only, please do not quote me on that. It also assumes 100% shareholding. This will also largely depend on other personal circumstances and incomes received, so its best to consult your accountant.
@ entrepreneur123, if your plan is to first take your yearly personal tax free allowance of £9,440 as PAYE from your business, you should be aware that you will have to pay PAYE NIC of £203.04 and employer's NIC of £240.67 making total NIC of £443.71.entrepreneur123 wrote:agree with you. so if we withdraw e.g personal allowance only from salary then that will be tax free, and as employer we dont need to pay NIC etc. and ofcourse other remaining amount can be dividends.....
Olasunkanmi wrote:@ entrepreneur123, if your plan is to first take your yearly personal tax free allowance of £9,440 as PAYE from your business, you should be aware that you will have to pay PAYE NIC of £203.04 and employer's NIC of £240.67 making total NIC of £443.71.entrepreneur123 wrote:agree with you. so if we withdraw e.g personal allowance only from salary then that will be tax free, and as employer we dont need to pay NIC etc. and ofcourse other remaining amount can be dividends.....
So my point is that you should not assume that you wont pay any NIC contribution if you take some payment through PAYE system.
ecaLegal wrote:It does seem a bit much like hard work, for what you will save. I'm sure dividends would be easier, but then I'm no accountant!
entrepreneur123 wrote:actually taking salary(paye) is more simpler compared to dividends. Because if you take dividends then you need to submit self assessment to HMRC separately as director in addition to normal company accounts.
ecaLegal wrote:It does seem a bit much like hard work, for what you will save. I'm sure dividends would be easier, but then I'm no accountant!
rehan01 wrote:Yes but if you on PAYE then you have to pay tax n NI, plus your employer tax contribution too??? and in this case you r employee and employer too? this is my understanding and other members have advised in better details.
regards
entrepreneur123 wrote:actually taking salary(paye) is more simpler compared to dividends. Because if you take dividends then you need to submit self assessment to HMRC separately as director in addition to normal company accounts.
ecaLegal wrote:It does seem a bit much like hard work, for what you will save. I'm sure dividends would be easier, but then I'm no accountant!
Get it in writing, these things need legal confirmation...entrepreneur123 wrote:Just to update: Before writting this question here, i did phone to home office asking them if we can be on paye of our company. But the guy over the phone wasnt sure and said that he will check n get back to me. Today got phone call from Home Office, he told me that case worker have confirmed that we can be on paye/take salary from our own firm. But we cannot claim this as expenditure as a part of our investment funds. Thanks
Wanderer wrote: Get it in writing, these things need legal confirmation...