In certain areas, HM Revenue & Customs has placed emphasis on
reclassifying individuals claiming to be self employed. They issued a leaflet,
IR56, Employed or Self-employed?
setting out the guidelines of employment status in the form of questions. These
cover the following principal factors:
·
The degree of control and supervision exercised over the individual’s
work
·
Whether services are performed mainly or wholly for one business
·
Where the duties are performed
·
Terms of pay, holiday time, pension arrangements, and other benefits
·
Whether the work has to be performed personally, or whether a
substitute may be supplied
·
Provision of items of equipment
·
The financial risk and responsibility for loss undertaken by the
individual
Please note:
We strongly recommend that if you are in any doubt as to the status of an
individual, ask HM Revenue &
Customs to clarify the situation.
Obtaining their approval will avoid the risk of you having to make a settlement
of liabilities to tax or NI that you failed to deduct from the employee’s
remuneration.
The HMRC website provides an Employment Status
Indicator (ESI) in order to help work out employment status. Although it is
intended for those who engage workers, it can be used by individuals who wish
to know what their own employment status is. Outcomes are based purely on the
information provided and can only be an indication of employment status, not a
definitive or legally-binding opinion.
Before establishing a PAYE system, it is necessary
to notify the HM Revenue & Customs office covering your geographical area by
telephoning the New Employers’ Helpline on 0845 60 70 143.
Upon registration, HM Revenue & Customs will send you guidelines on
operating PAYE, national insurance, statutory sick pay, statutory maternity
pay, statutory paternity pay and statutory adoption pay, including a number of
forms with which to operate the PAYE and NI systems. (See checklist below).
To help you calculate the amount of tax and NI due,
HM Revenue & Customs used to supply you with sets of tax tables. By referring to these, and
an employee’s tax code, you would be able to calculate the amount of salary not
subject to tax. The difference between this figure and the gross amount paid is
the employee’s taxable pay. The tax could then be calculated by reference to
another set of tables. The employer’s and employee’s NI would be calculated by
reference to the employee’s gross pay in conjunction with a third set of
tables. Note, however, several ‘benefits’ are also subject to NI even where the
tax is dealt with on a different basis.
Nowadays HM Revenue & Customs provide a CD-ROM
which is very comprehensive. It contains all the information formerly produced
on paper. There are facilities to complete various common forms on-screen, and
you can use the various calculators to work out PAYE tax and national insurance
contributions etc.
There is also an employer and employee database,
which effectively allows you to use it as your electronic payroll.
The tax and NI should be paid to HM Revenue &
Customs by 19th
of the month following payment. Employers who pay electronically have until the
22nd of the month to pay. Where the 22nd falls on a
weekend or is a bank holiday, payment must be received by the previous bank
working day.
Employers whose average monthly payments of PAYE and
NI are less than £1,500 in total are allowed to pay quarterly rather than
monthly (i.e. by 19th of July, October, January, and April). This
should be requested using form P31.
Electronic
filing of PAYE returns
Employers can now file P35, P38A and P14 forms over
the Internet. Employers are, on a phased basis, required to file their end of
year returns electronically. The implementation date will depend on the number
of staff involved, but all employers will have to send their returns
electronically from May 2010.
Employers with fewer than 50 employees can get
tax-free ‘incentive’ payments by filing their Annual return online, as follows:
Tax Year
|
Due by 19 May
|
Payment
|
|
2006-07
|
2007
|
£150
|
|
2007-08
|
2008
|
£100
|
|
2008-09
|
2009
|
£75
|
PAYE can be a tortuous procedure for the new
businessperson. We would be pleased to show you how to operate it properly or
provide a service for the maintenance of your PAYE records.