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Quote from: Dry Clean on June 30, 2017, 08:43:43 amQuote from: Perfect Windows on June 30, 2017, 08:20:22 amQuote from: 8weekly on June 29, 2017, 07:20:34 pmAs a sole trader, if you have done it yourself for four years, stick with it. I seriously doubt he'll find £2,000 worth of expenses which is what it would take to break even.If you pay the accountant £360, you're up if he finds you extra claimable expenses of £361.Vin£361 in extra claimable expenses will save you around £80, why do people not understand what tax deductible actually means.You are, of course, completely correct. My mistake.Vin
Quote from: Perfect Windows on June 30, 2017, 08:20:22 amQuote from: 8weekly on June 29, 2017, 07:20:34 pmAs a sole trader, if you have done it yourself for four years, stick with it. I seriously doubt he'll find £2,000 worth of expenses which is what it would take to break even.If you pay the accountant £360, you're up if he finds you extra claimable expenses of £361.Vin£361 in extra claimable expenses will save you around £80, why do people not understand what tax deductible actually means.
Quote from: 8weekly on June 29, 2017, 07:20:34 pmAs a sole trader, if you have done it yourself for four years, stick with it. I seriously doubt he'll find £2,000 worth of expenses which is what it would take to break even.If you pay the accountant £360, you're up if he finds you extra claimable expenses of £361.Vin
As a sole trader, if you have done it yourself for four years, stick with it. I seriously doubt he'll find £2,000 worth of expenses which is what it would take to break even.
^^^ What Barry said , probably the case for me , not that i ever did my returns in the first place , reason being that i dont understsand them anyway , cant be arsed , plus when i started up i needed a mortgage and was not even getting considered as i did not have an accountant let alone 3 years worth of figures to go on , he made it possible and that is that , i will keep giving him £252 a year not to stress , whats £252 anyway ?1 £20 house a month thats all !
Quote from: P @ F on June 30, 2017, 07:16:49 pm^^^ What Barry said , probably the case for me , not that i ever did my returns in the first place , reason being that i dont understsand them anyway , cant be arsed , plus when i started up i needed a mortgage and was not even getting considered as i did not have an accountant let alone 3 years worth of figures to go on , he made it possible and that is that , i will keep giving him £252 a year not to stress , whats £252 anyway ?1 £20 house a month thats all !£240 see why you have your accountant agree with what you say same reason for me really just cant be bothered doing it myself.
Quote from: p1w1 on June 30, 2017, 07:26:15 pmQuote from: P @ F on June 30, 2017, 07:16:49 pm^^^ What Barry said , probably the case for me , not that i ever did my returns in the first place , reason being that i dont understsand them anyway , cant be arsed , plus when i started up i needed a mortgage and was not even getting considered as i did not have an accountant let alone 3 years worth of figures to go on , he made it possible and that is that , i will keep giving him £252 a year not to stress , whats £252 anyway ?1 £20 house a month thats all !£240 see why you have your accountant agree with what you say same reason for me really just cant be bothered doing it myself.I just knew i would get that ...... ....... I should have put £21 , but im a rounding down kinda guy , i like to offer a bit of value , plus i would have to carry a lot more £1 coins and again i cant be fooked
just cant be bothered doing it myself.
If you're a straight forward 'i earn this and spend this' kind of person then yes. Hiring an accountant is pointless. If you own, or want to own property, if you employ, or if you have any complexity within your business then employ an accountant. Even if you think everything you do is easy, speak to one (or two) anyway. Tax is complex and even if you think you know everything about it, you probably don't. If you did you'd be charging £100 an hour and you'd be working behind a desk.
Quote from: Soupy on July 01, 2017, 12:06:14 amIf you're a straight forward 'i earn this and spend this' kind of person then yes. Hiring an accountant is pointless. If you own, or want to own property, if you employ, or if you have any complexity within your business then employ an accountant. Even if you think everything you do is easy, speak to one (or two) anyway. Tax is complex and even if you think you know everything about it, you probably don't. If you did you'd be charging £100 an hour and you'd be working behind a desk.If you go limited I think it's obligatory isn't it as you have to submit accounts to Companies House. I have an accountant now but as a sole trader I didn't bother. It's just a tax return really and I've always done my own. As Tosh said, you already have the data and if you use Aworka, the business page is a two minute job. I'll do mine and the wife's personal tax returns this year.
Quote from: p1w1 on June 30, 2017, 07:26:15 pm just cant be bothered doing it myself.You will have to provide your income and expenditure; keeping track of that is the 'work'.You've already bothered!
I'm not 100% sure but I believe an accountants bill cannot be used as a deductible expense. Might be worth checking.