Body & Soul8 mins ago
Self-employed or limited company
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My wife is working freelance as a nurse advisor available to the NHS and privately. She has been advised to set herself up as a limited company, by an agency that finds her such work. Is there any advantage to her to do this rather than be self-employed? Her earnings will be around £40,000 p.a. and expenses would in the main be travel, meals and accommodation when away from home. She is extremely unlikely to employ anyone else.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In my opinion - others may disagree, so feel free to do so - there's not much point in setting up a limited company unless she is likely to have assets she needs for her job. If as a limited company she were to get into financial difficulties, debts incurred would be payable by the company and not by her personally, which would obviously be good for her (and you) as she would not be in a position where she could lose personal property such as her car or her home. But as a nurse advisor would she likely to run up substantial debts? I doubt if it is necessary to act as anything other than a sole trader, but maybe the agency has sound reasons for advising her otherwise.
Semantics schmemantics. The term "self-employed" is bandied about a lot, not least by HMRC in their literature, but it does not appear in statute. It's universally accepted meaning however is to refer to someone who is a sole trader or an individual in partnership, undertaking a trade, profession or vocation. If she operates exclusively through a company she would not be "self-employed" as universally understood, but would be employed by the company under her control.
As long as she is not caught by IR35 then there currently remain some incentives to operate through a company, if she can keep the admin costs down (especially accountancy). Leaving aside the potential NI savings, there are possible commercial benefits in attracting work if, for example, some customers will only deal with companies (to escape employment law and PAYE obligations), as is common in the IT industry.
As long as she is not caught by IR35 then there currently remain some incentives to operate through a company, if she can keep the admin costs down (especially accountancy). Leaving aside the potential NI savings, there are possible commercial benefits in attracting work if, for example, some customers will only deal with companies (to escape employment law and PAYE obligations), as is common in the IT industry.