The company will pay flat 30% on all profits.
Edit: Wait a minute, won't you still have to pay tax on the money you would get from your company, meaning it would be taxed twice? Or does it work differently?
You can pay yourself franked dividends which will give you franking credits to offset the company tax paid, just like dividends you receive from other companies.
But then that defeats the whole point of setting up a company to pay a lower tax rate on trading profits - doesn't it?
Or do you do it for other benefits like maybe buying equipment in the company name?
Are you asking whether the profits need to be distributed? Then the answer is no. Only once you take them out of the company will you have to pay personal income tax.
Of course you can also instead pay yourself a wage, which reduces the company profit and if your marginal rate is under 30% will reduce the total tax.
So my question is, if your marginal tax rate is over 30pc - or more specifically higher than whatever the company tax rate happens to be, is it possible to get any tax benefit out of trading as a company rather than as yourself?
Obviously paying a dividend or wage (or even re-investing the profits) can limit this; but if you have profit in excess of the 30% marginal tax rate in your individual circumstances (I think this is about $80,000 currently without bothering to look) then you will be still paying a higher tax rate if you take money out of the company.
Sorry for the mess; this is hard to articulate over a forum.
But then that defeats the whole point of setting up a company to pay a lower tax rate on trading profits - doesn't it?
Or do you do it for other benefits like maybe buying equipment in the company name?
Fringe benefits tax? (I think - otherwise it'd fall under the anti-tax avoidance provisions in Part 4A)I don't suppose it's possible to buy assets as a company and sell them to yourself at a very discounted price?
Thanks - forgot when that was all coming in.Keep in mind the government plans to increase taxes so that you pay 32.5c to a dollar after $37k or so in the coming financial year, so this is indeed an issue which will affect a lot of people.
http://www.ato.gov.au/individuals/c...002/046/002/002&mnu=42957&mfp=001/002&st=&cy=
Also not sure; but I take it that investment income is exempt from the PSI rules? Does this change if you have a trading business?
Vespuria said:Fringe benefits tax? (I think - otherwise it'd fall under the anti-tax avoidance provisions in Part 4A)
The whole company structure may be more beneficial on lower incomes if my initial impressions are correct.
My understanding of the PSI rules is that they are designed to capture people who would otherwise be on PAYG but are using the company structure for no other reason than tax minimisation.
You're right - bit of a brain fade on my behalf.
I'm thinking more of the Trust - Company - Individual set up.You think? You'd need to be earning North of $100k before you paid the same amount of tax as would be levied on a company. Unless I'm missing something.
I'm thinking more of the Trust - Company - Individual set up.
For every incremental dollar over $37,000 you would distribute it to the bucket company. You'd be saving 2.5% tax.
It's different for only company and individual (which is what you are referring to) as it has to do with the overall average tax rate of the two entities.
Hmm maybe I ma getting myself confused again, however.
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