Home & Garden49 mins ago
P45
2 Answers
Hi all, I have recently left a job and started another. I have asked my previous employer for my P45 however they have written to me and advised me that I owe them money (reimbursement of sick pay as I was off ill for a few days before I left) and my P45 was not enclosed with the letter even though I know that their monthly payroll has been done. They have had a month to send it to me but have not done so and have not mentioned it in any correspondence. Have the the right to withhold it from me? Thanks.
Answers
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No best answer has yet been selected by minniemoo. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I assume that the firm can't issue the P45 until you've returned the money you owe them.
As an example, let's assume that you were overpaid by £100 (gross). £69 of that will have ended up in your pay packet, with £31 being paid to the tax man. (£20 tax and £11 National Insurance). When you pay the £69 back the firm will be able to reclaim the £31 from HMRC.
Since your P45 is a summary of your total earnings and the amount of tax which has been paid on those earnings, your former employer needs to 'get the books straight' before it can issue a final statement relating to those figures.
The absence of a P45 is no bar to employment. You simply need to ask a new employer for a P46. Your tax will eventually even out to where it should be.
Chris
As an example, let's assume that you were overpaid by £100 (gross). £69 of that will have ended up in your pay packet, with £31 being paid to the tax man. (£20 tax and £11 National Insurance). When you pay the £69 back the firm will be able to reclaim the £31 from HMRC.
Since your P45 is a summary of your total earnings and the amount of tax which has been paid on those earnings, your former employer needs to 'get the books straight' before it can issue a final statement relating to those figures.
The absence of a P45 is no bar to employment. You simply need to ask a new employer for a P46. Your tax will eventually even out to where it should be.
Chris