By clicking “Accept All”, you agree to the storing of cookies on your device to enhance site navigation, analyse site usage, and assist in our marketing efforts
These cookies enable our website and App to remember things such as your region or country, language, accessibility options and your preferences and settings.
Analytic cookies help website owners to understand how visitors interact with websites by collecting and reporting information anonymously.
Marketing cookies are used to track visitors across websites. The intention is to display ads that are relevant and engaging for the individual user and thereby more valuable for publishers and third party advertisers.
Yes you can take out dividends before corporation tax. Example your corportion tax is due soon and you have £1000 profit, you can take out 80% of that as a dividend and leave the rest to be taxed.
What?!? how?Apologies for the Bluntness , but the quote below is completely wrong and would lead to serious trouble
What?!? how?
Companies Act requires that dividends be drawn out of distributable profits , normally profit after corporation tax, and other mandatory non distributable amounts
1. Is it allowed to adjust your salary so your profits are approximately £0 and you avoid paying huge amounts of corporation tax and only have to pay PI tax?
2. Can dividends be taken out before corporation tax?
Then there will come a point where its better to start paying yourself a salary again once when you reach 40% income tax. From my calculations based its no longer efficient to pay yourself in dividends after 40% income tax.
Ok, my understanding hasn't changed then. I just failed to provide the circumstantial information in my example.
Its also worth mentioning you don't pay NI contributions on dividends and even dividends are subject to tax depending on which income tax band you're currently on.
Correct me if I'm wrong, in terms of tax efficiency the point at which you stop paying yourself a salary and start paying in dividends should be when your total amount of 'take home' money drops below 80%; this is while you are still on 20% income tax because taxable income is the amount you earn after your personal allowance.
Then there will come a point where its better to start paying yourself a salary again once when you reach 40% income tax. From my calculations based its no longer efficient to pay yourself in dividends after 40% income tax.
I hope you are not an accountant, or advising anyone on tax matters.
Is this correct?
Company Profit - £50,000
After Corp. Tax - £40,000
£40,000 is then paid to be me as a dividend...
After Personal Allowance - £31,895
After Dividend Tax - £28,705.5
Assuming its one small company with £50,000 taxable profits Corporation tax will be £10,000 leaving £40,000 which can be paid as a dividend.
Your personal tax will depend on your circumstances.
Did you include in the company accounts any salary payable to you?
Is this correct?
Company Profit - £50,000
After Corp. Tax - £40,000
£40,000 is then paid to be me as a dividend...
After Personal Allowance - £31,895
After Dividend Tax - £28,705.5
That isn't my understanding. I think it is more efficient to extract profit via dividends all the way up, because of the saving of employers NI contributions, which would only be offset by 1/5 by corporation tax reduction. The dividend tax rates seem to be set so that PAYE and dividends are neutral, but employers NI applies to PAYE payments.
I'd be very grateful if it were pointed out that I'm wrong...