ChatterBank0 min ago
Starting A New Business On Ebay
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How do I register for hmrc as self employed or business I already have a job where I pay tax and ni this is just part time and do i get all ebay , postal, pay pal fees back at the end of year from hmrc?
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You need to keep proper books so that you have a record of your income, expenditure and overheads. You also need to choose an accounting date (up to 15 months after you start, most people pick one year after). With an eBay business, your income is the total paid for things you sell, your expenditure is the cost of acquiring the things you sell and your overheads include eBay and PayPal fees, computer costs etc. On your accounting date, you calculate your net profit and you pay tax on that. You declare your profits - as well as your salary and the tax deducted from it - on a self-assessment return (which you can also do online). The tax calculation is to take your salary plus profits, deduct your personal allowance, calculate the total tax, then deduct what you have already paid under PAYE. NI is more complicated. There's a flat rate paid by self-employed people but you may get some back if you've paid enough on your salary.
A session with an accountant will set you in the right direction and should pay for itself in tax saving hints.
You need to keep proper books so that you have a record of your income, expenditure and overheads. You also need to choose an accounting date (up to 15 months after you start, most people pick one year after). With an eBay business, your income is the total paid for things you sell, your expenditure is the cost of acquiring the things you sell and your overheads include eBay and PayPal fees, computer costs etc. On your accounting date, you calculate your net profit and you pay tax on that. You declare your profits - as well as your salary and the tax deducted from it - on a self-assessment return (which you can also do online). The tax calculation is to take your salary plus profits, deduct your personal allowance, calculate the total tax, then deduct what you have already paid under PAYE. NI is more complicated. There's a flat rate paid by self-employed people but you may get some back if you've paid enough on your salary.
A session with an accountant will set you in the right direction and should pay for itself in tax saving hints.
That transaction would be recorded on your expenditure page under several columns - cost of item 50p. postage costs , ebay/paypal fees should all have separate columns making up the £1.20.
The sale for £2 goes in your income column.
At the end of the year you add up all the columns and declare your profit on the total difference between your income and your outgoings. It's the total profit you will be taxed on, and yes, the 30p would be the taxable amount in that case you quote.
The sale for £2 goes in your income column.
At the end of the year you add up all the columns and declare your profit on the total difference between your income and your outgoings. It's the total profit you will be taxed on, and yes, the 30p would be the taxable amount in that case you quote.
I think you are confusing income with profit.
As I said earlier, you list all the costs of making/purchasing each item, which comes to £1.70. You then sell it for £2. Your profit (as you say) is 30p per item. If you sold 9000 of things, that would come to £18000 income, and you set all your expenses/outgoings against that income, to give you the net profit figure. That's what you are taxed on, the net profit.
As I said earlier, you list all the costs of making/purchasing each item, which comes to £1.70. You then sell it for £2. Your profit (as you say) is 30p per item. If you sold 9000 of things, that would come to £18000 income, and you set all your expenses/outgoings against that income, to give you the net profit figure. That's what you are taxed on, the net profit.