businessman
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Cash in my company account: 260K
Mortgage on family home: 400K remaining (single owner, my partner is not involved)
Spouse age: 33
Spouse gross income: 35K
Cash: 80K in bank account
Mortgage on family home: 400K remaining
- I am thankful that I have a safety cushion of cash in my personal account . But this cash is losing value with inflation.
I agree with Brendan on this too. If you die prematurely, your partner will be left with a big tax bill if she gets the house. If your intention is for her to remain in the house if you died, make sure it is in a will. And then make sure there is life cover through a life of another policy where she takes out life cover on your life (you are too young for a section 72 policy). Or else get married.Is she your partner or your spouse?
If she is your spouse, she is involved in the house.
If she is not your spouse, as you are planning to have kids together, you should take an hour out and go down to the Registry Office and get married. This is more tax-efficient when there is a disparity in people's incomes.
It also protects her in the event that you suddenly kick the bucket. She will inherit your assets tax-free.
Your company can claim tax relief in the year that it is paid
Why not retrain for something else.My PAYE income is uncertain. It has served me well, but it will not last forever.
The industry is in decline and in my opinion will not be viable in a few years.
I feel I could lose my job any time.
My career at 35 feels like it has been long, drawn out and stressful.
He's not single, but otherwise you're on the nail here.Why not retrain for something else.
For a single man on a great salary and a side line you seem to be way over stressed.
This question is probably too vaguely phrased to elicit a meaningful answer.Is buying an asset in the company which acts as a vehicle to allow me leave my job a runner?
Yes I realise that but the way he writes it leads me to believe he's trying to keep everything as a single person while still wanting children. And it seems he needs to bite that bullet or walk away.He's not single,
I'd agree with this, 10k really isn't significant income relative to 95k salary, especially as it's at the highest tax rates. I think there may be some false mental accounting going on because it has been kept in a company and seems more significant than it is because it hasn't been taxed.The other aspect is how much time does this side hustle take up? If it takes up evenings and weekends regularly then the 10k may not be worth it. It ultimately might be better to shut it down to reduce stress burn out.
It is the right thing to do, but as he is only making €10k profit a year, he will be wasting a lot of the tax deductibility. But the alternative is worse.
How would you engineer that? By increasing turnover? Does this business take up a lot of your time? Do you enjoy it?Well I take 10K salary but the company actually turns over 50K per year.
I could probably engineer it to have a 30K + profit if I wanted to.
I agree with Brendan, you should not have accumulated so much money in your business. It doesn't make any sense. To take it out of your business will cost you 52% in tax. Your pension is very underfunded, I would put most of it in a PRSA. You company can claim tax relief in the year that it is paid. The removal of annual pension funding for PRSAs is exactly for this situation. Earn €10,000 and put €200,000+ in a pension in one year and no funding checks. Use it!
Use some of the cash in your current account to reduce your mortgage. You won't see the benefit of this for years when the mortgage is paid off earlier.
Going forward, reduce the amount you spend on a car.
I agree with Brendan on this too. If you die prematurely, your partner will be left with a big tax bill if she gets the house. If your intention is for her to remain in the house if you died, make sure it is in a will. And then make sure there is life cover through a life of another policy where she takes out life cover on your life (you are too young for a section 72 policy). Or else get married.
Steven
This question is probably too vaguely phrased to elicit a meaningful answer.
It's usually a bad idea to have a company owning a property. You sound like you could do with some strong accountancy/tax advice on this and associated ideas and issues.
It is the right thing to do, but as he is only making €10k profit a year, he will be wasting a lot of the tax deductibility. But the alternative is worse.
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