Can someone help me? I do the bookkeeping for a small ltd co. (t/over sub 100k) with a sole director. I have just been presented with an invoice for c9k +Vat for a purchase made by the director for his use (ie a non business purchase), paid for out of the co. bank account. He is not in position to to refund the value of the purchase and intends to treat it as a director's benefit. How should I account for this in bookeeping / VAT and Directors benefit terms? I use Sage instant accs Thanks
Another director who thinks that the money in the company belongs to them! Makes you scream doesn't it.
The VAT is part of the purchase price rather than being deductible so the actual amount is £10,575.
The whole sum can either be a withdrawal of owners capital from company (if a sufficient balance exists), a dividend or salary. (It's really too large to consider as a directors loan account).
If the company is subject to IR35 legislation then dividend is unlikely to be an option as the only dividend available would need to come out of 5% of turnover which leaves this as salary.
Interested to know what other peoples takes would be on this but as I see it the guy just paid himself £10,575 of extra salary this year!
all the best,
Shaun.
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Shaun
Responses are not meant as a substitute for professional advice. Answers are intended as outline only the advice of a qualified professional with access to all relevant information should be sought before acting on any response given.
Hehe, maybe suggest to him he should take 10.5k less as his salary this year, just to see what he would say. You see I was just telling someone on another post about bookkeeping in Hungary and there we not only have sole traders,partnerships and all sorts of ltds but there is another category in between what eliminates the need of these one man companies so a director and a secretary company can operate almost like a sole trader here but with limited liabilities
It's a personal expense. It's not something that's a benefit as per the usual understanding of Benefits in Kind.
So, our friend has a £10.5k debit to his directors loan account (and the VAT can't be reclaimed as it's not a business purchase). There's nowhere else for the transaction to go.
If his DLA is in credit by more than this then we have no further work to do.
If it is not and this transaction makes it a debit then either
1. Dividends to the DLA (not cash) - but this depends on having sufficient P&L reserves to cover it. 2. Not take salary in cash until the DLA returns to credit.
If the DLA ends up as a debit of more than £5,000 then this is a beneficial loan and to avoid this being a benefit on a P11D then you will need to charge 4.75%pa interest (per HMRC beneficial loan rates) on the DLA.
Depending on the year end this is the only issue. If he has a DLA overdrawn at the year end, then he MUST be able to repay it before 9 months after the year end or else the company must pay a 25% penalty tax on the overdrawn amount (what was called s419).
agree with Moxby but would add that if for whatever reason this transaction is taken to the directors loan account and it ends up with old S419 tax paid (is this S455 now, cant remember), the director should be advised that this tax payment will be refunded at some point after the overdrawn directors loan account is cleared. May be useful to mention is the company will not be in a position to pay divi's for a year or two.
The director is probably not in a position to not take a salary in cash for a few months, however a bonus could be considered which would be transferred to the directors loan account although could be quite expensive tax wise. I like the divi route myself.
-- Edited by adi2402 on Saturday 9th of October 2010 05:08:35 PM
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Forgive the typo's I generally do not proof read. Just lazy I guess!
I dumped a client like this. She just woudn't stop putting personal purchases through the Ltd company (either paid by company cheque or company cr card), stuff made out in the company name but being used on renovating her home, etc. etc. I advised her accountant too but nothing would stop her.
Everyone else appart from you is allowed to change their Avatar! (I think site membership might drop dramatically if you did).
I'm not back properly until after Christmas when everyone's likely to be too busy to chat (fingers crossed for everyone there).
As for my Avatar, just thought that it was time to bring the fat cat back again as I've got my bankers head on at the moment.
Talk soon,
Shaun.
__________________
Shaun
Responses are not meant as a substitute for professional advice. Answers are intended as outline only the advice of a qualified professional with access to all relevant information should be sought before acting on any response given.