IR35 penalties: the cost to contractors of being caught inside IR35

Qdos Consulting

IR35 penalties are a fact of life limited company contractors need to be aware of. Contractors working on contracts that they know to be inside IR35 must pay significantly higher tax and National Insurance Contributions (NICs), resulting in a steep reduction in their net earnings.

However, contractors who know their contract is inside IR35 and choose to conceal it, or who are subsequently found inside IR35 following an HMRC inspection, face steep IR35 penalties.

And, although IR35 is being reviewed by the Office of Tax Simplification as part of a wider review of small business taxation, IR35 penalties will still apply to contracts completed while the legislation was in force, whatever the OTS recommends as IR35’s successor.

HMRC’s IR35 penalty regime

A tough new penalty regime was introduced by HMRC in April 2009 that did away with the previous negotiated settlement. In the past, a contractor’s tax adviser could negotiate away much of a contractor’s liability and reduce payments; but the new system introduced the concept that taxpayers must exercise ‘reasonable care’.

IR35 penalties will be levied when a contractor under-declares their tax liability by not calculating their deemed payment of additional tax and NICs as a result of being inside IR35. These penalties will be still be payable whether the contractor introduced the inaccuracy by being careless, by deliberately not calculating the deemed payment when they know they are inside IR35, or by deliberately under-declaring and concealing the facts.

The penalty is 30% of unpaid tax if HMRC considers the contractor to have been careless. But the IR35 penalties are really steep if HMRC believes the underpayment to be deliberate: 70% of unpaid tax if the contractor knew they were inside IR35 but deliberately did not make the deemed payment calculation; and 100% of unpaid tax if the contractor knew they were inside IR35, deliberately did not calculate the deemed payment and attempted to conceal the underpayment.

Deemed payment: an IR35 penalty

Because of IR35’s ‘deemed payment’ rules, contractors can pay up to 25% more tax and NICs if they are found to be a disguised employee and their contract is inside IR35.The rules allow a 5% allowance for expenses and then the rest of a contractor’s gross earnings for the contract inside IR35 are subject to income tax and NICs, seriously penalising those contractors affected.

IR35 penalties will be levied when a contractor under-declares their tax liability by not calculating their deemed payment of additional tax and NICs as a result of being inside IR35

However, the extra tax calculated under the deemed payment is considerably less than not declaring IR35 status and then being caught inside IR35 by HMRC. Contractors can use ContractorCalculator’s IR35 Calculator to work out how much being caught within IR35 could cost them.

A duty to take ‘reasonable care’

The IR35 penalty regime also requires taxpayers to exercise reasonable care. According to HMRC’s guidance, “’Reasonable care’ varies according to the person, their circumstances and their abilities. But we expect everyone to make and keep sufficient records for them to provide a complete and accurate return.”

Crucially for contractors, HMRC goes on to say that to demonstrate reasonable care, a taxpayer should check “the correct position when you don’t understand something”. This suggests that contractors who choose to undergo an IR35 contract review for each assignment could be demonstrating reasonable care.

IR35 penalties can be costly, time consuming and stressful for contractors, particularly if the case is taken to a tax tribunal and the courts, so implementing best practice to avoid IR35 should result in contractors remaining firmly outside the scope of the legislation.

Updated: Monday, December 26, 2011

© 2012 All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. Please see our copyright notice. If you want to use any content you have seen on this site then please request our media pack and ask for details of our Content Licencing Service.


Readers Comments...


  
Bookmark and Share
  
     
  

Latest Site Updates

The tax avoidance arms race is MAD: mitigation, avoidance and disclosure The tax avoidance arms race is MAD: mitigation, avoidance and disclosure

The tax mitigation arms race between HMRC and tax advisors leads to a never-ending cycle of mitigation, avoidance and disclosure, says David Colom.

Does HMRC even know where its ‘better administration of IR35’ target is? Does HMRC even know where its ‘better administration of IR35’ target is?

If contractors agree to trial HMRC’s new IR35 framework for 12 months, how are we going to measure if ‘better administration’ has been achieved?

ContractorCalculator: Contracting news in brief - 18/May/2012 ContractorCalculator: Contracting news in brief - 18/May/2012

News this week includes the latest IR35 insights; P35 advice; contractor demand data; partial financial sector recovery; & HMRC service improvements.

P35 guidance: unsure contractors should answer ‘no’ to service co question, says HMRC P35 guidance: unsure contractors should answer ‘no’ to service co question, says HMRC

Contractors are not legally obliged to answer the P35 question 6, ‘Are you a Service Company?’, and if they’re unsure should answer ‘no’.


  
  

Twitter

  • Will the new Enterprise Research Centre dedicated to SMEs recognise the role of contracting businesses in the economy? http://t.co/ACE31fIm

    5 hours ago

  • HMRC defends it tax gap calculations claiming external estimates are misleading http://t.co/7RWvC7bq via @AccountancyAge

    6 hours ago

  • The tax avoidance arms race is MAD: mitigation, avoidance and disclosure http://t.co/9q1WMPjD

    10 hours ago

  • Does HMRC even know where its ‘better administration of IR35’ target is? http://t.co/L3MuqlFz

    Mon, 21 May 2012

  • IT leads surge in Scottish contract recruitment : Bank of Scotland Report on Jobs http://t.co/QIrLKFGb

    Mon, 21 May 2012

  • How might government's 'secret plan' to link civil service earnings to location affect public sector contractor rates? http://t.co/fJClb0HG

    Sun, 20 May 2012

Follow Us On Twitter


  
     

  
  

Contractor solutions

Contractors Handbook AM Limited IR35 Test
  
Contractor accountants - pricing checklist
  

Contractor solutions

Choice Premier Pay+

Take home up to 85% of your pay. IR35 solution.

Contractors Handbook

The expert guide for UK contractors and freelancers

Parasol Group

Umbrella or Limited? Guidance on best options, and take home pay.

InTouch Accounting

Person to person contractor accountant. Free IR35 review.

Bedouin Group

No more IR35. Retain up to 85% of your earnings.

NA D J Colom Accountants Bedouin Group Contractor Financials NewsNow
  
Elevate

  

The UK's leading contractor site. Independently audited traffic (ABC) – 156,346 monthly unique visitors.