Extracting monies from your limited company Optimal Directors Salary & Tax on dividends 2019/20
This article is relevant for contractors or freelancers working through their own UK limited company on contracts within the private sector and small businesses with one or two directors / shareholders.
Extracting monies from your limited company in the most tax efficient way usually involves a combination of taking a low salary and declaring some dividends.
Main changes (effective from 6th April 2019)
Income Tax
| Tax Thresholds |
£ |
Rate (%) |
| Personal allowance |
12,500 |
0% |
| Basic rate threshold |
37,500 |
20% |
| Higher rate threshold |
50,000(was £46,350) |
40% |
| Upper rate threshold |
Over 150,000 |
45% |
This means any income between £12,501 and £50,000 will be taxed @ 20% and any income above £50,000 will be taxed at the higher & upper tax rates.
Dividend income
| Tax Bands |
£ |
Rate (%) |
| Dividend allowance |
2,000 |
0% |
| Dividend ordinary rate |
37,500 |
7.5% |
| Dividend upper rate |
50,000 |
32.5% |
| Dividends additional rate |
Over 150,000 |
38.1% |
This means that if you are a basic rate tax payer and have more than £2,000 of dividends, these will be taxed at 7.5%
So, if your only income was dividend income you could receive £14,500 of tax free dividend income in 2019/20. This is due to both your £12,500 personal allowance and also the £2,000 dividend allowance.
National Insurance limits:
| Limits / thresholds |
£ |
Description |
| Lower earnings limit |
6,136 |
You need to earn above this limit to protect your entitlement to the state pension. You won’t necessarily have to pay any NI at this limit. |
| Primary threshold |
8,632 |
If you earn above this limit you will start paying National Insurance |
Please find below a summary of the most tax efficient salary and dividends structure for the new 2019-20 financial year.
1)Optimal Director’s salary
This year, I would recommend a figure of £715/month or £8,580 a year.
This is just below the point at which you start having to pay National Insurance, (the primary threshold) but is sufficient to ensure you receive a full credit for the state pension (the lower earnings limit)
2)Dividends
The remainder of your remuneration package will be in the form of dividends (which will be subject to tax at 7.5% up to the basic rate threshold of £50,000)
However, you will get the first £5,920 tax free, as you have £12,500-£8,580 still to use of your personal tax free allowance plus your dividends allowance still to use.
Example:
Someone taking £50,000 out of their company this year will result in a personal tax liability of just over £2,600.
The calculation looks like this:
Salary £8,580
Dividends £41,420
Total £50,000
First £12,500 covered by personal allowance
Next £2,000 covered by dividend allowance
Remaining £35,500 tax at 7.5% = £2,662.50
As dividends can only be declared on profits after tax, I will monitor your profits quarterly to ensure you are on track and discuss accordingly.
Please note :
Key assumptions made in this article:
- You are a UK resident tax payer with a standard personal allowance
- Your only source of income is your salary and dividends from your limited company
- Assumption being that you are operating outside of IR35 (private contracts)
- This has been written based on the available information at the time
- There are other things that could affect the final tax bill (e.g. student loan repayments, child benefit high income tax charge and the withdrawal of the personal allowance once your income exceeds £100,000



