IR35 Update

February 24, 2021

 

Due to the COVID-19 outbreak last year, the UK Government announced that the IR35 reforms would be delayed for a year and come in to force in April 2021.

As yet, there has been no update as to whether there will be any further delay to the reforms. With the date for change set as 6 April 2021, we look at what the changes entail.

What are the changes?

From 6 April 2021, the IR35 tax rules will be extended to medium and large businesses. This means that all public sector and medium or large private sector businesses that engage individual contractors through personal service companies (PSCs) will be responsible for reviewing and deciding on their correct employment status. If the new off-payroll working rules apply then a contractor’s wages will be subject to tax and National Insurance contributions.

What is considered a medium and large business?

For IR35 purposes, all businesses will be classed medium and large businesses unless they have two or more of the following attributes:

  • not more than 50 employees

  • a turnover of not more than £10.2 million

  • a balance sheet not more than £5.1 million

All companies are also classified as ‘small’, rather than medium or large, in their first financial year.

What does this mean in practice?

In practice, this means that if the way in which a contractor is working indicates that they aren’t genuinely self-employed but should in fact be classed as an employee or worker, then the companies engaging them will be responsible for deducting tax and national insurance contributions on the payment made to the PSC. This shifts the legal responsibility from the PSC (as is the case under the current rules) to the engaging company. Businesses which fail to comply with the new rules, and fail to deduct tax at source for contractors who HMRC deems should be brought on-payroll, will face significant tax liabilities and penalties.

Businesses will also need to provide a “determination statement” to those of their contractors who are working through a PSC, setting out what the business has determined their employment status to be and why.

What should businesses do to prepare?

As a first step towards complying with the new rules, medium and large organisations should carry out a review of the terms and conditions of their contractors who are engaged through a PSC in order to determine whether they can still be classified as self-employed. Businesses that use contractors through agencies should also liaise with those agencies as part of this exercise. They will then need to consider whether any of their contractors will need to be brought on-payroll.

 

 

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