The Revenue have rules as to who is an employee and who is a contractor. If you are working full time for one company/individual, and your conditions indicate that you are an employee - you are an employee - and the company is the one who the Revenue will come back at if they do not treat you as an employee and operate PAYE/PRSI. This would be the case if you considered yourself self-employed (not working through a Ltd company). Please also note that the Revenue could also come back to the individual also, but this does not usually happen.
An aside on this is that treating individuals as employees protects their rights under employment law, etc (redundancy payments, certain Social Security beneifts etc).
However, using a Ltd company gets employers out of this situation as you are then providing services through a company rather than personally.
However, I would point out that the Revenue will at some point hit this, and it is not guaranteed forever, but at the moment they do not attack such set-ups, and there is no guarantee that they will not do so.
Note that in the UK, the UK Revenue brought in IR35 rules for sub-contractors using Ltd companies, through legislation, looking through the company directly to the individual.
I would guess (and this is only a guess) that the Irish Revenue will follow suit on this at some time.
An aside on this is that treating individuals as employees protects their rights under employment law, etc (redundancy payments, certain Social Security beneifts etc).
However, using a Ltd company gets employers out of this situation as you are then providing services through a company rather than personally.
However, I would point out that the Revenue will at some point hit this, and it is not guaranteed forever, but at the moment they do not attack such set-ups, and there is no guarantee that they will not do so.
Note that in the UK, the UK Revenue brought in IR35 rules for sub-contractors using Ltd companies, through legislation, looking through the company directly to the individual.
I would guess (and this is only a guess) that the Irish Revenue will follow suit on this at some time.