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self-employed / 5 posts found

An image of an old car wheel with spokes

8K – Hub and Spoke

by mike tombs
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Today is the final day on the 8 Key Drivers of Business Value! If you’re a business owner working too many hours a day, too many days a week, then this driver will apply to you – Hub and Spoke. If you imagine a spoked wheel, every piece of the wheel is tied to the centre. As a business owner, you make up the hub of the business, with every individual piece being tied directly to you. Hub and Spoke is down to how dependant your business is on you personally. If your customers are coming to you for everything [...]

Keep private bank accounts private

by mike tombs
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Many small businesses, including landlords, use personal bank accounts to lodge business receipts and make business payments. If traders in this situation are subject to a HMRC enquiry into their business affairs, HMRC would be entitled to request sight of all bank accounts that record business transactions even if those accounts are essentially, personal bank accounts.   As many of the transactions in these accounts are personal, you may need to explain to HMRC where credits to the account came from and provide evidence that the credits are nothing to do with your business.   Without this confirmation or evidence, [...]

Exclusivity and tax relief

by mike tombs
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In order to qualify as a deduction for tax purposes we have to demonstrate that the expenditure was incurred “wholly and exclusively” for the purposes of our business or employment. We will also need to consider a further criterion: where the expenditure has a duality of purpose. In a 1980’s case, a barrister claimed for the cost of business suits which she insisted were only used for business purposes. To her delight, the lower courts agreed, but HMRC were having none of it and pursued their case to the House of Lords where the taxpayer’s claim and appeal was dismissed. [...]

Self-employed liability

by mike tombs
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If you are a sole trader, or in a basic partnership, and if your business gets into financial difficulties, any liabilities that cannot be covered by the disposal of business assets may have to settled out of personal assets. In accountancy speak, you have unlimited liability; there is no protection for your personal assets. You have options. The Office for Tax Simplification has suggested, welcomed, the idea that sole traders can elect for a form of limited liability status that will allow them to protect their homes from any claim by business creditors. At present, this is pure conjecture. Mr [...]

Working from home?

by mike tombs
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We are often quizzed by clients who are contemplating working from home: what are the tax consequences? And in particular, will I have to pay capital gains tax?   Capital gains tax   Generally speaking, if your business use is limited to allocating space for a home office, then as long as there is duality of use, no capital gains tax complications should arise when you sell the property. Duality of use means that your home office: doubles as a spare bedroom, or a storage space for domestic items, or is a study or has a similar non-business as well [...]