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[Closed] Being self employed. Are we screwed in the next budget

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Just been going through the news headlines today and from what I can make out it doesn’t look too good being self employed at the next budget when it comes to tax. I have no problem paying my tax that is owed but if you’re self employed do you get the same perks as being employed. Do you think we should pay the same tax as an employed person. Just throwing the question out there.


 
Posted : 13/02/2021 4:17 pm
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Yes and Directors on dividends.

No we shouldn't pay the same level of tax as we create jobs and tax take.


 
Posted : 13/02/2021 4:19 pm
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I suspect everybody will be screwed to some extent (except those at the top). Taxes for self employed and employed should be broadly similar whatever the circumstances. In terms of perks, there are pros and cons for both. There has to be or we'd all be doing one or the other.


 
Posted : 13/02/2021 4:20 pm
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it doesn’t look too good being self employed at the next budget when it comes to tax

They said it was coming when they announced the coronavirus related help for the self employed last spring. Of course, all the self employed that pay themselves through transparent and normal measures will be hit, not just those who claimed or were eligible for the help. I currently have an offer of going PAYE, and I strongly suspect I’ll be better of for 2021/22 tax year if I take it up.


 
Posted : 13/02/2021 4:20 pm
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List the perks you think you're not getting.

Give them an estimated value.

Subtract any tax paid on these perks.

That should get you close to your answer - in financial terms at least.


 
Posted : 13/02/2021 4:21 pm
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I suspect everybody will be screwed to some extent (except those at the top).

This


 
Posted : 13/02/2021 5:00 pm
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I'm pretty stuffed. Last year I sorted all the IR35 compliance stuff but being honest I'm not going to get offered a fulltime PAYE roll at my age so I'd be part time on the books and I don't think the figures pan out well for me.


 
Posted : 13/02/2021 5:30 pm
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everyone is going to be screwed...apart from those rich enough to take advantage of the government sanctioned loopholes they lobbied for


 
Posted : 13/02/2021 5:46 pm
 Aidy
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No we shouldn’t pay the same level of tax as we create jobs and tax take.

Ok, Amazon.


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 1:16 pm
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Not quite Amazon.... certainly cant avoid corporation tax, PAYE, NIC or VAT.

SMEs are not well supported in the UK, we get lumped in with everyone else. There are very few benefits for SME limited company

If you create a company that employs people it means you have to invest time and money - take risks. If there is no reward for those risks then there is little in the way of drivers to create jobs and wealth.


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 1:32 pm
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If there is no reward for those risks then there is little in the way of drivers to create jobs and wealth.

A successful company will grow and generate profits. Unless those profits are taxed at 100% as well as any share sale taxed at 100%, there is a reward for the risk/effort. Given that no one is talking about 100% taxation, I really don't see what your argument is.


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:17 pm
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Do you think we should pay the same tax as an employed person. Just throwing the question out there.

Yes

I have a bunch of self employed friends. One paid 1/10th of the tax I did on similar earnings ( No real costs). all the fiddles of getting stuff claimed against tax, taking dividends rather than salary to avoid tax. all that stuff

It really really annoys me how little tax and NI self employed people pay


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:29 pm
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do you get the same perks as being employed. Do you think we should pay the same tax?

Worth remembering that 3.5 million self-employed people have been hung out to dry and haven’t received a penny in government support since last March, despite paying the same levels of tax as the employed

It really really annoys me how little tax and NI self employed people pay

I’m self-employed and pay my tax and NI on a PAYE basis, so I pay exactly the same as you. As do the vast majority of self-employed people. It’s a small, rich minority who get to take the piss


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:30 pm
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I would also question what perks you think I get that you do not


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:30 pm
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My tax and Ni are the same as when I was employed. Literally no difference.


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:30 pm
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seosamh77

You don't claim for transport, tools, equipment, cars etc etc?


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:32 pm
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despite paying the same levels of tax as the employed

You don't tho do you?


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:33 pm
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tjagain
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seosamh77

You don’t claim for transport, tools, equipment, cars etc etc?

I put costs related to my business in, why wouldn't I? People employed people don't pay tax on these things either, only difference is their company offsets the tax.

When I was employed for a company I wasn't paying for software licenses, office furniture, web space etc etc etc


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:34 pm
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I’ve been PAYE for 7 years now, but when I was a ltd co contractor there really wasn’t a massive difference in tax take.

21% company tax on profits
Employees and employers NI
Personal tax

It’s hard to make it all add up to exactly what a PAYE person would pay on same day rate, but it’s not far off.


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:36 pm
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You don’t tho do you?

Yes I do. Which bit of ‘I pay my tax and NI on a PAYE basis’ are you struggling with?

The supposed tax advantages are exactly that... supposed

In reality, there is no tax advantage

But don’t let that stop you asserting baseless nonsense as fact


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:39 pm
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Tax rates for self employed in scotland

Personal Allowance Up to £12,500 0%
Starter rate £12,501 to £14,585 19%
Basic rate £14,586 to £25,158 20%
Intermediate rate £25,159 to £43,430 21%
Higher rate £43,431 to £150,000 41%
Top rate over £150,000 46%

Plus
Class 4
Up to £9,500 nil
£9,500 up to £50,000 9%
Over £50,000 2%

Plus Class 2 Ni which is about £160 for the year.

There's no difference.


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:42 pm
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seosamh77

do you only claim for business costs or do you claim from "business costs" ie every little thing you can think of that could possibly be included?

I ask because thats what one of my self employed mates does. He drives for work as a freelancer. But he claimed for 2 cars and a motorcycle to be offset against tax plus his lockup and other stuff with at best only peripheral relationships to his work

I paid per month £820 tax ni and superannunation ( £200 effectivly a tax but one that gets me a small pension) on a gross income of £2350

Thats more than 30% or 25% if not including the superann

Edit - my pal above paid less tax in a year than I did in a month on a similar income

Binners - you don't claim against tax for stuff?


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:43 pm
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So what you’re basically saying here is that you think you pay too much tax?

Why don’t you just say that instead of throwing unfounded accusations at other people?

Binners – you don’t claim against tax for stuff?

when you’re at work, have you paid for the laptop you’re working on, the software licenses it’s running? Are you paying to heat the building you’re in? Did you buy the chair you’re sat on? The desk you’re leaning on?

I did


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:45 pm
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So, your mate is ripping the piss(till he gets audited would be my guess.) So we are all at it? 😆


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:46 pm
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@tjagain, if you think he’s taking the piss, report him.

Just because one person is doing it, it doesn’t mean all self employed people are money grabbing mercenary scum*.

*a phrase actually used by the head of technology in a major high street bank I was working for. Properly motivating that was...


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:48 pm
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No - what I think is the loopholes folk use to avoid tax need to be tightened up significantly.

the mate I referred to is not the only one - I know a load of self employed people and they all pay minuscule amounts of tax compared to those of us on PAYE


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:48 pm
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tjagain
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No – what I think is the loopholes folk use to avoid tax need to be tightened up significantly.

What do you think every company in the country does? Just cause employed people don't see this stuff doesn't mean it doesn't affect them.

If you don't allow costs to be offset, then everyone's wage would reduce significantly. Employed and self employed.


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:51 pm
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the mate I referred to is not the only one – I know a load of self employed people and they all pay minuscule amounts of tax compared to those of us on PAYE

Bollocks you do.

Unless you’re actively involved in defrauding HMRC you’ll be paying about the same

And if you’re defrauding HMRC you won’t get away with that for very long, I can assure you. And they’ll nail your arse to a tree when they collar you.

I’ve had my books audited and they go though them with a toothcomb and pick you up on even the tiniest of errors. I got a telling off because I’d entered the wrong price in the tax audit for postage stamps


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:51 pm
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tjagain
the mate I referred to is not the only one – I know a load of self employed people and they all pay minuscule amounts of tax compared to those of us on PAYE

I find it crazy you know this, I haven't a scooby what my mates pay in tax. 😆 Couldn't care less either.


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:52 pm
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binners
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defrauding HMRC

Yeah, this is the ultimate mistake you are making here TJ, assuming everyone is evading taxes.

I'm perfectly happy for my accounts to be audited.


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:54 pm
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Why do so many contractors resist going PAYE if that's the case?


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:56 pm
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No idea, I'm no a contractor.


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:58 pm
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Why do so many contractors resist going PAYE if that’s the case?

I’m a freelancer and pay all my tax and NI on a PAYE basis as it’s just easier. Most of the freelancers I work with do too

It really ****s me off the assumption from people in cushy jobs, with all the perks (no sick pay, holiday pay or employers pension or NI contributions for us) that we’re all on the fiddle and have all got yachts moored in Monaco payed for by defrauding HMRC 🙄

Particularly after a really, really difficult year where 3.5 million freelancers and self-employed have received absolutely zero government support. A lot are now destitute. Many have committed suicide.

So get your facts straight!

Your baseless assumptions are miles off the mark and incredibly offensive


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:59 pm
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I was a self employed contractor paying the same tax as a PAYE person for years. I used an umbrella company who ensure the tax is correctly payed. All 100% above board. There was also very little that could be claimed as expenses, I do agree in years gone by there were loop holes and some people took advantage.
I don’t get a pension or holidays paid. TJ, we’re you not on reduced duties for a while? That’s not an option for me, I’d lose the contract. My friend is an NHS doctor, her daughter has had issues which have resulted in my friend being on long term sick (her pay has remained unchanged), so far she been off since the end of December. I would lose my contract with no pay. Are you not getting ready to retire on your NHS pension soon? I don't get a company pension.
I don’t class those as perks by the way, just differences between our employment contracts.
Threads like this are just pointless tbh. Too many people looking down from their ivory towers with no real knowledge of each others individual circumstances.


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 7:02 pm
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Doomanic - for the simple reason that if you pay tax on income as it’s earned rather than when it’s paid and then have months without any work you then have no means to sustain yourself other than benefits - it’s called cashflow . This is exactly the position millions have been stuck in over the last year.

Why should small companies be treated more harshly than big ones?


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 7:05 pm
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I paid per month £820 tax ni and superannunation ( £200 effectivly a tax but one that gets me a small pension) on a gross income of £2350

Are you counting your pension as a tax here? On 28200 a year, you should only be paying 450 quid tax and ni a month?

A bit off no, to be claiming that a tax?

Tax year:
2020-21
Enter your current salary: 28200 (12 x 2350)

Your results
Over the year, you'll pay £3,152.06 income tax and £2,244 National Insurance.

Your monthly income before tax is £2,350.

Your take home pay is £1,900.33.


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 7:06 pm
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@doomanic in my line of business it was never my choice to remain as a contractor. It was purely down to circumstance. Before children I had no need to work full time. I contracted for 6 to 9 months then would take a period of time off. This happened for 4 or 5 years. I applied for permanent positions but as I had a background of contracting I ended up stuck in that cycle. Managed to break the cycle eventually and took a permanent role, with a large finance company. Pretty much every week if felt like they were restructuring and the job felt less secure than a contract. Lasted it for 3 years before finally had enough and went back contracting.


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 7:08 pm
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£220 in superannuation £430 in tax, 180 in NI. thats a direct read off my payslip. My earnings did vary month by month so that effects tax but that was a low wage month.

I find it crazy you know this, I haven’t a scooby what my mates pay in tax. 😆 Couldn’t care less either.

He was whinging about not getting any sick pay because he only pays the lowest NI IIRC. so i went thru some numbers with him to show he wasn't getting ripped off and that he paid less than 1/10th the tax and NI I did


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 7:12 pm
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Well don't blame us cause your mate is a dodgy character. 😆


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 7:15 pm
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Every self employed person I know does this

Binners - lets take your laptop. did you claim it 100% against tax? Is it only used for paid work?


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 7:17 pm
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Exactly! Don’t lump us all in with the tax-dodgers you choose to knock about with

Every self employed person I know does this

You know me and I don’t do this.

I do everything straight down the line, and look where it’s bloody got me over the last 12 months? As far as the government is concerned, I don’t exist

You think being self-employed is cushy? You try the life me and 3.5 million others have had since last March.

Why not have a read about what a bloody great time we’ve all been having

https://www.excludeduk.org/excluded-uk-an-inclusive-alliance-for-the-excluded

Frankly, you don’t know how ****ing cushy you’ve got it


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 7:17 pm
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TJ it’s frankly a bit rich to complain about other people “whinging” when your own NHS pension scheme has guaranteed benefits that are simply unavailable to most of the people reading this thread.

As an example - NHS employees continue to enjoy an index linked defined benefit scheme that can rise to a maximum pension pot of £2m before it attracts extra tax. Everyone else can only non index linked money purchase schemes and gets clobbered for tax at £1m.


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 7:19 pm
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TJ I’m willing to send you my payslip. You will be very surprised at the amount of tax contractors pay.
All you would need to do is to apologise to people like binners and myself who believe in paying our tax.


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 7:23 pm
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cheddarchallenged
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TJ it’s frankly a bit rich to complain about other people “whinging” when your own NHS pension scheme has guaranteed benefits that are simply unavailable to most of the people reading this thread.

shh that pension is a tax don't ye know...


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 7:24 pm
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£200 effectivly a tax but one that gets me a small pension

Superannuation isn't a tax so stop pretending it is, it comes off before gross which is a tax and NI benefit. One of those loopholes you don't like.


 
Posted : 14/02/2021 7:25 pm
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