What is a dividend?
A dividend is a payment a limited company can make to shareholders when it has made and retained sufficient profit.
The most common way to pay yourself as the director of your limited company is using a mixture of salary and dividends. Keeping your salary low, minimizes the amount of NICs you have to pay, as dividends do not attract National Insurance, which are due on a sole trader’s profit and payments to employees. Therefore, most directors take a small salary and the remainder of their company’s profits as dividends as this is the most tax-efficient payment method.
How to pay yourself a dividend?
Your first step is to assess the available profit of the limited company, also known as ‘retained profits’, which can be calculated by deducting expenses such as PAYE, use of home as office and training (among other potential expenses), and any tax liabilities – including the corporation tax due on the profit which is currently 20% ( reducing to 19% from April 2017)for profit below £300,000. This is the amount which is available for payment as dividends. Be aware; this is the cumulative balance ever since the company was formed, so needs to take into account liabilities on any loans, for example, and previous dividends. The first time you approach this important calculation, it is sensible to enlist a qualified accountant.
You will then need to document the dividend, by creating a dividend voucher. This is a legal document that all companies that issue dividends create and issue to shareholders and most good contractor accountants will normally do this for their clients for a small fee.
The dividend voucher should detail the date, company name, names of the shareholders being paid a dividend; the amount of the dividend, and (until April 2016) the amount of the notional dividend tax credit. Once a dividend voucher has been created, you can then actually pay a dividend.
You should be aware that your dividend could be illegal if you distribute an amount higher than is available or if you fail to create a dividend voucher and complete the necessary paperwork.
It is also worth bearing in mind that as dividends are the distribution of profits after tax, if you don’t document and follow this process correctly, HMRC may take the figures you have drawn and not documented correctly and claim that they are either a salary or that they are forming a Directors’ Loan, both of which would have negative tax consequences.
How are dividends taxed from April 2016?
As of April 6th 2016 limited company contractors no longer receive their notional 10% tax credit on dividends. Instead, they have been given a £5,000 tax free allowance on dividend income ( reducing to £2,000 from April 2018), which is in addition to the £11,500 personal allowance for the 2017/18 tax year. Any dividends that you draw out beyond this limit will be taxed at 7.5% for basic rate taxpayers, 32.5% for higher rate taxpayers, and 38.1% for additional rate taxpayers, which will need to be paid using the self-assessment system.
When’s the best time to take a dividend?
As a limited company owner you are free to distribute dividends, however often you like as well as being able to determine the amount you distribute, so long as the sum of the dividends distributed in your company year does not exceed the amount of profit your company has made. The frequency with which dividends are declared is much less important than whether they are legal or not i.e. not exceeding profit and completing necessary paperwork.
You may wish to discuss the tax implications with your accountant, who will be able to advise you on how to utilise your tax allowances year-on-year. For example, if your company has sufficient profits and you still have some of your basic rate tax band left, you can declare a dividend with the intention of taking it at a later date should you not want to pay yourself at that time.
Many accountants suggest processing dividend payments on a monthly or quarterly basis, to keep record-keeping simple, and also advise keeping dividend and salary payments separate in order to provide a clear audit trail.
The pitfalls of the low salary-high dividend mix
Dividend levels are said to be monitored by HMRC to identify potential IR35 suspects. Having a disproportionate ratio of dividends versus salary declared on a tax return has been known to spark an IR35 investigation.
It is important to understand that IR35 is not based on how you extract money from your company; it is based on how the money got there and whether you were acting as a disguised employee when you made that money. If you have paid all your company profits as PAYE salary then HMRC won’t be checking for IR35, as there won’t be any return if they do.
However if you draw most of your company profits as dividends then you are paying less tax and NICs than you would for a PAYE salary – which means that there is more potential return for HMRC if they found that you were inside IR35.
Ultimately, dividend levels don’t put you inside or outside IR35 — but they may pique the Revenue’s interest and prompt an enquiry.
How were dividends taxed before April 2016?
As corporation tax was already paid on your company’s profits, a ‘notional tax credit’ of 10% was available to the shareholder to avoid double taxation. This was offset against income tax that would otherwise be due on the dividend income received.
The dividend paid by the company to the shareholder, classed as a ‘net dividend’, if multiplied by 10/9 will give you the ‘gross dividend’ amount, which is the sum upon which income tax is payable.
For basic rate taxpayers (where income was between £0 and £31,785 for 2015/16 tax year) there was no further tax to pay on dividends, as the basic dividend tax rate and tax credit were both 10% and as such cancelled each other out. Therefore their effective dividend rate was 0%.
For higher rate taxpayers (where income was between £31,785 and £150,000 for 2015/16 tax year) the effective dividend tax rate was 25%, and for additional rate taxpayers (where income was over £150,000 for 2015/16 tax year) the effective dividend tax rate was 30.56%.
Source – Contractors UK