40%-45% once close company surcharge is included.Putting it into a pension is the best thing to do. Otherwise set up an investment bond through the company and invest it. The company is taxed at 25% on the gain instead of 41% which individuals have to pay.
+1If that money has been there accumulating, you are paying corporation tax so I would get it into a pension before your next year end.
The OP badly needs an accountant.
Putting it into a pension is the best thing to do. Otherwise set up an investment bond through the company and invest it. The company is taxed at 25% on the gain instead of 41% which individuals have to pay.
It's not investment advice you need at all. (Few accountants offer investment advice as a service either, and for good reason.) As things stand, you've presumably already paid Corporation Tax at 12.5% on all company earnings to date and stand to suffer perhaps another 50% on the eventual extraction of those funds from the company. This is a cumulatively high tax burden and I'd argue an unnecessarily high one.I do have an accountant but he doesn't do investment advice, the services included are standard payroll, vat returns etc. Is this something I should be expecting my accountant to do?
40%-45% once close company surcharge is included.
Doesn't apply when the money is invested.40%-45% once close company surcharge is included.
+1
The OP badly needs an accountant.
Corporate accounts typically don't get the same rates as individuals so you may not get the same rate.As mentioned pension is not really appealing to me but if there is no other option I will probably put a chunk of it there. I had no idea about an investment bond so thanks for suggesting, I'll do my research on this.
Is doing something like opening an account (for the business) in a European bank that offers higher deposit interest payments something I could look at, would there be any implications on my company from doing this?
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