The system is the system. Do you add a little on top when you pay your tax then?Google and Amazon say the same.
The system is the system. Do you add a little on top when you pay your tax then?Google and Amazon say the same.
Perhaps when you can tell us you use none of the above products of the companies you are calling out, we will take your posts a bit more serious instead of just thinking what a two faced ****ing hypocrite you are.
Carry on using them then but perhaps lay off the criticisms then. Just makes you look a two-faced ****.nor to tolerate tax-dodgers.
perhaps lay off the criticisms then
So you’ll continue criticising tax-dodgers as well as continue supporting them. Nice one.Thanks for your suggestion, but no, I will not stop criticising tax-dodgers.
supporting
Went to Greggs for a sandwich,
Don't rely on mottie, he takes a very flexible view to paying his dues.
There’s only one view regarding paying your dues - the legal view and that’s the one I adhere to. No more, no less. Is that wrong of me?
I am running as a LTD Co. HMRC have been steadily closing the loophole by reducing the amount of dividends you can take before paying tax on them which I suppose is only fair - if everyone used it there'd be no tax revenue for them to squander! Currently personal allowance £2K at the moment. I think it was £5k last year and £10k the year before and even more before that with no personal tax payable. The just started making them taxable from last year I think. Mind you, as long as you're not silly with them you can keep the personal tax liability to 7.5% for each director although they can't be offset against expenses so the company pays corporation tax on what you take too. About the only saving really is the personal and company NI payments.If you are set up as a Ltd company and pay yourself dividends -that is not wrong.
You are using a tax loophole which means you pay less overall tax than if you were self employed or on PAYE, however HMRC knows its a loophole, so they could close it if they wanted to.