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Post Info TOPIC: self employed client


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self employed client
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Hi guys,

I have a possible client...I am qualified to do the book for sole traders, but do self employed people come under this.  This client is a self employed car sales and repairs person for a car company??!!

Thankyou in advance.

Jazzyjeff



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If it's the books of the person and not the car company then yes you are allowed to do them.

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Ok thankyou...just wanted to make sure!

jazzyjeff

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Another question regarding this topic...Can he have expenses to deduct like  a sole trader would?

jazzyjeff

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Jeff,

A sole trader is often the type of business form a self employed person would use if they are working on their own. Apologies if I'm misunderstanding you but you seem to be confusing the two.

So yes, a self employed person would have expenses they can deduct from profits.



-- Edited by ADAS on Tuesday 1st of February 2011 04:59:45 PM

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Tony

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No this person is self employed but has an employer ie. he works for a garage so not quite a sole trader.

jazzyjeff

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Does he get paid a wage or does he invoice his work out ?

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Steve
gbm


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jazzyjeff wrote:

No this person is self employed but has an employer ie. he works for a garage so not quite a sole trader.

jazzyjeff



I think you're trying to say that he is self employed, but he only works for one 'customer' - the garage.

If so, he would have to demonstrate that he is genuinely self employed, rather than just an employee who is called self employed.  I presume you appreciate the difference between employment and self employment.

If he is genuinely self employed, then yes he can claim expenses, such as tools, overalls, insurance, and perhaps a small amount of motor expenses and telephone.  NB presume his 'place of work' is the garage, in which case travel from home to the garage is private.

 HTH



-- Edited by gbm on Tuesday 1st of February 2011 07:33:00 PM

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Steve, he invoices his work.

jazzyjeff 

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jazzyjeff wrote:

Steve, he invoices his work.

jazzyjeff



I think the point being made by Nick is 'should he be invoicing the work'. If HMRC were to deem the individual to be an employee there could be penalties and back taxes to pay.

I can't seem to find it on the HMRC site at the moment but there is a calculator to check the situation.

 



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Could it be this one.

http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/calcs/esi.htm


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Tony

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I've come across self employed people only once and they worked the same hours at the same place and handed an invoice over weekly for hours worked however the accountant warned them that if they do that for long enough they could end up being classed as employed. Don't really know if this is right or not but it might be worth looking at.

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Steve


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Have a read of my blog on this ....

Freelancers are the key to growth in 2011 but BEWARE is that really a freelancer in your business?

at

http://www.cheapaccounting.co.uk/blog/?p=1355

The key is how HMRC see the role not how the person sees it!

Hope this helps.

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cheapaccounting wrote:

Have a read of my blog on this ....

Freelancers are the key to growth in 2011 but BEWARE is that really a freelancer in your business?

at

http://www.cheapaccounting.co.uk/blog/?p=1355

The key is how HMRC see the role not how the person sees it!

Hope this helps.



Thats an interesting read because they pretty much fell into the employed category which could be why they were warned.

 



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Steve


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well I think that the warning was valid then biggrinbiggrin


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