Grayorm":intdd99q said:
Drudgeon":intdd99q said:
Regarding the Ltd/Not Ltd issue,
When I first went out on my own, I had a good chat with an accountant, he advised me to start off for a year or two as a sole trader and see how it goes, as a rough guide he said to me that if I were to make clear profit of above 25K it would be more beneficial going Ltd, yes the admin costs would be more, but you would save more back in tax to cover that and plenty more beyond.
After my First year trading I was well over that (just as well really or my family would have been rather cold and hungry!) so he advised me to go Ltd, I have finished my trading year as a Ltd co so I can't compare tax bills etc.
My opinion would be that if you do go registered, you need a good accountant to ensure you reap the benefits of being Ltd, if you try to scrimp on accountants costs and think you can do most of it yourself, you will probably miss out on a bunch of tax you could have saved.
You cleared £25k profit in your first year of trading as a 1 man band?! What are you doing?
I'm doing various things TBH, I was a site manager for 8yrs, so I made a lot of contacts before I jacked it in to work for myself, I spent half my first year making bedrooms and shop fittings, bedrooms mainly for private clients, shop fittings for a couple of different main contractors, I spent a bit of time out on site fitting for a couple of large joinery firms I know, and I also did a little site management on short term contracts for a shop fitting outfit. A lot of the work I was getting wasn't very high spec, but it paid the bills, I'm slowly but surely starting to get better quality clients, which is allowing me to produce better quality work, but it's been a real hard slog, to be fair, making money was the easy part, making money doing what I really want to be doing is what is really hard. I'm sorry if that sounds arrogant, I don't mean it like that, but I am London based and have been in the game my whole life, and have made a lot of contacts over the years, I was a site manager for a very high spec refurb outfit for quite a long time, and in London, people are screaming out for site managers with experience in that area, but I just wanted to get out of it, get a good quality of life for me and my family, (not nessasarily in financial terms, but in terms of flexible working hours and how much time I can spend with them), going back on the tools in the workshop was really hard, I felt like an apprentice all over again, and not having any real decent machinery was such hard work, but now I've invested in some and am slowly building myself up, hopefully one day I'll get where I'd like to be.