Planning your year-end dividend
The end of the tax year is approaching and you want to make full use of the 8.75% tax rate that applies to dividends. How can you work out how much dividend you can take and ensure its payment before the tax year ends?
Tax efficiency
For most company owner managers the most tax-efficient approach for income they take from their companies is a combination of salary and dividends. The former should be equal to their tax-free allowances and reliefs, and the latter enough so that their total taxable income is as close as it can be to the point at which higher rate tax applies. We therefore often see the suggestion that salary should be equal to the personal allowance (£12,570 for 2023/24), with dividends equal to the basic rate band limit (£37,700), but this is a crude formula. The tax rates and bands are different for Scottish income tax but the principles are the same.
Fine tuning tax efficiency
When determining if you should take more dividends, salary or benefits from your company you need to factor in other income you receive and tax reliefs or deductions you’re entitled to. The most common examples are:
- earnings from other employments or self-employments
- dividends and taxable investment income
- tax relief for losses on a trading business
- pension contributions you personally pay or that are deducted from your net of tax salary
- gift aid payments.
The calculation can be tricky, and because you might not know exactly what your income is until after the tax year has ended some educated guesswork is required.
Income timing
Timing extra salary or benefits from your company is relatively straightforward. When salary is paid or a benefit provided it’s immediately taxable. So, e.g. if you decide to pay yourself an extra £5,000 salary before 2023/24 ends, your company only needs to put it through the payroll on or before 5 April 2024. Getting the timing of a dividend right can be more tricky.
Dividend timing
There are two types of dividend, interim and final. Tax rules determine the year for which each type counts as taxable income. Final dividends. These only count as taxable income when approved by the company’s shareholders at a general meeting or by a written resolution. The approval process for final dividends can therefore take time that you don’t have. Interim dividends. These count as taxable income as soon as the money is “placed at the disposal of the shareholder”, i.e. when the money is actually paid, e.g. by bank transfer, or if earlier when the shareholder has the right to draw on the dividend. For example, if you’re a director, this is when the dividend is credited to your director’s loan account. If you’ve decided on the amount of dividend to maximise income tax efficiency for 2023/24, make sure you allow enough time to take care of the admin before the end of the tax year. An interim dividend is usually the best option.
Related Topics
-
HMRC reminds employers about payrolling benefits deadlines
HMRC is reminding employers of key dates and preparations ahead of the transition to real-time payrolling of benefits in kind (BiKs). With an important voluntary registration deadline approaching, what do payroll teams need to know?
-
Why do frozen mileage rates affect VAT?
Your business pays a fixed mileage allowance to staff who use their private cars for business travel. The rates published by HMRC have been frozen since 2011 but is this relevant to determine how much input tax you can claim on the payments?
-
HMRC restarts direct recovery of tax debts from bank accounts
HMRC has resumed use of its Direct Recovery of Debts (DRD) powers, enabling it to recover unpaid tax directly from the bank accounts of businesses and individuals who have ignored repeated attempts to settle outstanding liabilities. What does this mean in practice for business owners and directors?