Extracting profit from the family company
The start of the new tax year is the perfect time for shareholders/directors to review the salary and dividend mix for 2019/20.
The £3,000 employment allowance continues to be available to wipe out the first £3k of employers national insurance contribution (NIC)’s for the year. This means that where the company has not used this allowance it may be set against the employers NIC on directors’ salaries.
So, where the only employees are husband and wife there would generally be no PAYE or employers NIC on a salary up to the £12,500 personal allowance.
(There would however still be employees NIC at 12% on the excess over £8,632 (£166 per week) which would be £464 on a £12,500 salary, leaving £12,036 net).
Dividends rates are still 7.5% for 20% tax payers and 32.5% for higher rate tax payers (You get the first £2k tax free).
Taxation of Dividend Payments in 2019/20
Traditional advice would then be to extract any additional profits from the company in the form of dividends. Where dividends fall within the basic rate band (now £37,500) the rate continues to be 7.5% after the £2,000 dividend allowance has been used. Thus where husband and wife are 50:50 shareholders they would each pay £2,663 tax on dividends of £37,500 assuming they have no income other than a £12,500 salary, leaving £34,837 net of tax.
So a combination of £12,500 salary and £37,500 in dividends would result in £46,873 (93.7%) net of income tax and NICs.
Ensure dividend payments are legal
The Companies Act requires that companies may only pay dividends out of distributable profits (profit after tax bill). This means that in the absence of brought forward reserves the company would need to provide for 19% corporation tax in order to pay the dividends and thus there would need to be profits of £92,593 in order to pay dividends of £75,000 (after providing corporation tax of £17,593).
Overall the combination of salary and dividends suggested above would result in net of tax take home cash of £93,746 for the couple out of profits before salaries and corporation tax of £117,593 (20.3% overall tax). This still compares very favorably with the amount of tax and NIC payable if the couple were trading as a partnership.
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