When is Paying a Dividend ‘illegal’?

A dividend may be ‘illegal’, in that it is contrary to Company Law, when the proper procedures are not followed. If the Taxman examines the paperwork and decides the payment from your company was not a legal dividend he may treat the amount paid as a loan, or even as a bonus payment.

In both cases additional tax may be due from the company and sometimes from you.

To pay a legal dividend it is not sufficient just to write ‘dividend’ on the cheque stub or against the entry in director’s loan account.

We recommend following these steps when paying dividends:-

1. The directors should first review the profits available for interim dividends. This is not the same thing as funds in the bank account, as you have to take account of other assets and liabilities. Those deliberations should be recorded as a formal board minute, so if the Taxman ever asks, you can prove the profits were there when the decision to pay an interim dividend was made.

2. If the final accounts for the year are complete and show the accumulated profit and loss account is positive, the directors can recommend the profits, which are not required for investment, can be paid out as a final dividend to the shareholders. The shareholders can either accept the directors’ recommendation or suggest a lower figure of dividend. Both these decisions also need to be properly recorded at the time they are made.

3. Dividend vouchers need to be prepared when either a final or interim dividend is paid, for each shareholder showing the total due, the tax credit attached to the dividend and the date of payment.

4. The dividend should be paid. The payment can be transferred from the company’s account by cheque or bank transfer into the shareholder’s own bank account. If the shareholder is a director his account in the company books may be credited with the dividend due to him or her, but this needs to be done as soon as possible after the decision to pay a dividend is taken.

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Radical Pensions Reform – Suggested £140 Per Week For All

One of the major developments in the last quarter was Iain Duncan Smith’s announcements of radical pensions reform.

The Secretary of State for Work and Pensions said: “Over the years small changes to the state pension system have turned what started as a relatively simple contributory system into a complex mess, leaving people utterly confused as to what the state pension means for them.”

“We have to send out a clear message across both the welfare and pension system: you will be better off in work than on benefits and you will be better off in retirement if you save.”

The Secretary of State is keen to simplify the state pension regime, which is currently made up of a combination of basic pension and means-tested top-ups. Mr Duncan Smith wants to replace this with a single state pension entitlement of £140 a week.

Clearly, this reform is in its early stages but we will report on it further as it develops.

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VAT – Checking the Numbers

Having an invalid VAT number amongst the documentation when the VAT-man investigates you can be a costly problem. However, there are ways to minimise this risk.

The two danger areas for invalid VAT numbers are:-

– suppliers pretending to be VAT registered; and
– exports to EU customers (if your client has them).

What’s the problem with suppliers? As an unregistered person is not able to issue a proper VAT invoice HMRC will not support your claim to recover input VAT on that invoice, so they may well ask for it back. The most face saving thing you can do is to check a sample of VAT numbers on an annual basis (not just new suppliers) and keep a note of this on file.

For new suppliers you should ring the VAT National Advice service (on 0845 0109 000) and ask if the supplier number is valid and belongs to the address given. Unfortunately HMRC won’t tell you any more than this. You should also check out the business address given on the invoice. It is now a legal requirement for any business to declare exactly where it trades from. And it’s best to check the phone number by using directory enquiries for the business name and address given.

Exports? You can only zero rate their sales of goods to VAT registered customers in member states providing you…

– obtain their customers VAT registration number and quote it in your sales invoices; and

– have commercial evidence that the goods have been removed from the UK within three months.

Sales to unregistered customers are subject to UK rates. When you ask for a valid VAT number you might not get an immediate answer from your export customers. If this is the case, you should always keep some form of documentation to satisfy HMRC but do ensure you follow this up to make sure you get the VAT number.

The above steps prove that you have done your best to establish the validity of VAT numbers given to you. You have acted in ‘good faith’ and your input claim should not therefore be overturned.

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