Considering property investments via your contracting limited company

Contractor Financials

Introduction

Contractors who fall outside IR35 and use a limited company structure pay themselves a low salary and receive the rest in dividends from the company profit.

Some contractors consider the possibility of using profits for property investment within the company. However, in most cases it is not advisable for the following reasons:

Capital gains tax issues

Investing via a limited company means losing out on many exemptions and reliefs available only to individuals, including exemption for principle place of residence (if you live in the property) and taper relief.

In addition, when the property is sold, you may face a double tax bill on the proceeds, since the company will have to pay tax on the capital gain and if you then wish to extract the profit from the company, you will need to pay further personal tax on the income or gain arising.

Questionable tax saving

The allocation of company profits after corporation tax to the purchase of investment property rather than distribution to the shareholders, will not generate any tax saving whatsoever if you are a basic rate tax payer.

Only in the event that you are a higher rate tax payer will you postpone the higher rate tax liability. On the assumption that you will one day sell the property and hopefully make a profit, the day will come that you will wish to extract that profit, at which time you will need to pay the tax at whatever rates apply then. Only in the event that the investment turns out bad, would you have actually saved tax.

Contractual risks

As a consultant you do run the risk, however small, of being sued for negligence, etc., and in the event that you are not fully covered by a professional indemnity policy, any legal action directed at your limited company would put at risk any assets held in that company.

P11D / Benefit in kind issues

If you derive any personal benefit from the company’s ownership of the property, e.g. occupation, holiday home, etc., then you will be taxed on the benefit in kind. No such charges arise if you own the property personally.

Business climate

Without wishing to take a political slant, it can hardly be denied that the advent of IR35, the settlements legislation (formerly known as Section 660) and increasing regulation on small limited companies, has significantly decreased the average life span of a one person consultancy company.

The placement of an investment property within such a company may prove a great inconvenience in the event that you wish to have the company dissolved. Prior to dissolution, the property would need to be transferred out of the company, which would crystallise any capital gains, in addition to stamp duty and legal costs of transfer.

Conclusion

   
David Colom

David Colom

Principal

D J Colom & Co Chartered Accountants

David Colom qualified as a Chartered Accountant in the City of London in 1981 and is the founder and principal of D J Colom & Co Chartered Accountants established in 1989.

Started specialising in serving IT contractors in 1993 and is now one of the longest standing suoppliers of accountancy services to computer contractors. Read Full Profile...

View all our experts

   

For all of the above reasons, you would be best advised to keep your investment property outside of your consultancy company. It may be that your personal circumstances and future plans would make it appropriate for an investment property to be placed within a limited company, but this should be a separate limited company set up for the specific purpose of property investment.

Updated: Thursday, February 23, 2012

© 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

    7 hours ago

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

    8 hours ago

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

    11 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.