Shopping & Style2 mins ago
Tax
19 Answers
I have "a friend" who did some work for another person on a website for which they were paid £1000 via Paypal. They then withdrew the money to their bank account.
My question is do they have to pay tax on it, as they have no intention of doing so? Will anyone notice this in the bank and say anything? If someone does say something, what is likely to happen to "my friend"?
My question is do they have to pay tax on it, as they have no intention of doing so? Will anyone notice this in the bank and say anything? If someone does say something, what is likely to happen to "my friend"?
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In answer to your question, Yes, they should declare it on their Income Tax return. If they don't declare it and someone "shops" them it may end up costing them more than just the unpaid tax. What happens if the person your friend did the work for claims the £1000 as a business expense and lists your friend as the person who they paid the £1000 to?
Anyone who works for cash-in-hand without paying tax is committing tax evasion.
Apart from that, the more these people pay in tax the less the rest of us has to.
Anyone who works for cash-in-hand without paying tax is committing tax evasion.
Apart from that, the more these people pay in tax the less the rest of us has to.
yes he should pay tax on his world wide income based on current thresholds and allowances so he should declare it on his tax return or ask for one if he does not get a tax return. It probably won't get noticed, the bank are no friends of HMRC so he'll be safe there unless they start to think it's some sort of laundering operation but for a bag of sand a month I'd say they wouldn't bother. If HMRC get wind of it in the future they'll back date the whole lot and demand the tax, could end up in jail if it's serious enough. I'd say he has 2 chance per year cumulative of getting caught. so after 50 years he'll have definately been caught, average time for getting caught 25 years. HMRC are snowed under so it'll take something that draws their attention before he gets caught.