When your limited company makes a profit, you can choose to pay a percentage of that profit to your shareholders. This is known as a dividend payment and is one of the most common ways for directors and shareholders to extract cash from a successful business.
But did you know that the dividends you receive are taxed separately from other sources of income? Or that dividends have their own tax rate, and that this rate recently increased?
We’ll explain how dividends are paid and taxed – and how to do this tax-efficiently.
How do dividends work?
Dividends are the payments you receive on shares you hold in a company. This could be shares in your own company or shares you hold in a publicly listed one.
The company pays corporation tax (CT) on its profits and the amount left after that is potentially available for it to pay out to its shareholders. As a shareholder, this means you’ll receive a dividend payment, with the amount you’re paid decided by the company.
How will your dividend payments be taxed?
Although the company has already paid CT on its business profits, as a shareholder you must still pay tax on the personal income you’ve received in the form of dividend payments.
The process of taxing your dividends works like this:
Talk to us about dividend tax planning
To make sure you don’t lose out when receiving a dividend payment, it’s important to think about dividend tax planning as part of your ongoing tax strategy.
We’ll help you find the best mix of dividends and salary payments to extract funds from your company. This meets your compliance needs and also minimises the tax charged by HMRC.
Let’s sit down to run through your planned dividend income and check that you’re taking money out of the company in the most tax-effective manner.
Get in touch to talk about dividend tax planning.
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