How do you report your online income?

Discussion in 'Legal Issues' started by 8everything, Aug 1, 2007.

  1. #1
    A basic question:

    How do you report your online income?

    (because it's sometimes easy to find it)

    OR shall I ask, do you report it at all? :p
     
    8everything, Aug 1, 2007 IP
  2. Carlx

    Carlx Active Member

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    #2
    are you talking about declaring your earnings to the government? because i dont entirely understand your question.
     
    Carlx, Aug 1, 2007 IP
  3. rcj662

    rcj662 Guest

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    #3
    You add the online income to your income on tax form. In the USa if you make over $600 from a company they file report to IRS so your better off filing online income because fines and penalties will cost you alot of money.
     
    rcj662, Aug 1, 2007 IP
  4. browntwn

    browntwn Illustrious Member

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    #4
    I report all my income, regardless of the source.
     
    browntwn, Aug 1, 2007 IP
  5. AstarothSolutions

    AstarothSolutions Peon

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    #5
    In the UK you have to register yourself as self employed with HMRC and you will then be sent a self assessment tax return before the end of the financial year.

    If you incorporate then you have to do a corporate tax return and if you need to do a tax return or not will be subject to the normal PAYEE rules (you need to be making very large shares earnings or have massive savings to have to do a tax return when you are an employee as the company is responsible for doing your earnings tax elements at source)
     
    AstarothSolutions, Aug 2, 2007 IP
  6. syedwasi87

    syedwasi87 Active Member

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    #6
    i guess you are talkin in context of taxing ??

    well i am lucky..in my country no taxes :cool:
     
    syedwasi87, Aug 2, 2007 IP
  7. 8everything

    8everything Peon

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    #7
    Which country are you from?? We get taxes a lot here in Canada
     
    8everything, Aug 2, 2007 IP
  8. syedwasi87

    syedwasi87 Active Member

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    #8
    Qatar :cool: yeah i know a lot about us and canada...taxes really suck the salary :eek:
     
    syedwasi87, Aug 2, 2007 IP
  9. 8everything

    8everything Peon

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    #9
    Yes! Once you get the taxes that are over 20% of your income, it burns :(
     
    8everything, Aug 2, 2007 IP
  10. syedwasi87

    syedwasi87 Active Member

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    #10
    you know another good thing about here?

    water and gas cost the same :cool:
     
    syedwasi87, Aug 2, 2007 IP
  11. 8everything

    8everything Peon

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    #11
    Gas is cheaper there too eh??????? We probably have cheaper water though :p
     
    8everything, Aug 2, 2007 IP
  12. AstarothSolutions

    AstarothSolutions Peon

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    #12
    20% :O

    Your lucky, my income tax is 40% - even basic income tax is 22% plus 1% national insurance
     
    AstarothSolutions, Aug 2, 2007 IP
  13. 8everything

    8everything Peon

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    #13
    40% is way too much, but tax does increase here if you earn more $$$...
     
    8everything, Aug 2, 2007 IP
  14. syedwasi87

    syedwasi87 Active Member

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    #14
    do you get taxed for online income too??

    theres no proper way of tracking that tho:cool: rite?
     
    syedwasi87, Aug 2, 2007 IP
  15. 8everything

    8everything Peon

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    #15
    Yes we do get taxes for it. Yes I guess you can hide it but.. that's not legal now is it :p
     
    8everything, Aug 2, 2007 IP
  16. AstarothSolutions

    AstarothSolutions Peon

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    #16
    Never sure what people strictly mean by online income but most our business is both found and paid for online.

    Yes, any money that the company makes is taxed - though naturally you offset what it costs to run the company and only pay tax on the difference between the two.

    Of cause you could try tax avoidance but I personally have never fancied going to prison. As most our clients are businesses and therefore our invoices will be going into the tax man as a cost for them it wouldnt take too much intelligence for the tax man to see that companies have reported that they have paid us £x but we have reported that we have only received £y that something fishy is going on. Even if they didnt work out it was, being the cause of one of our clients being investigated by HMRC isnt going to go down well.

    Our taxation is a sliding scale too subject to your earnings but unfortunately no matter what tricks I can legally play I am still in the 40% band which really isnt very hard to get into
     
    AstarothSolutions, Aug 2, 2007 IP
  17. rsuog

    rsuog Peon

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    #17
    what if......for example, you register an offshore Cyprus/BVI/Gibraltar company with a bank account...and receive direct payments from CJ

    is that possible? will CJ/Google send direct bank account payments to offshore companies?

    does anyone have any experience with that?
     
    rsuog, Aug 2, 2007 IP
  18. Hannah

    Hannah Guest

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    #18
    I just report it in "other income".

    For those asking about suggestions leaning towards tax fraud, do keep in mind that if you get caught you're looking at a large number of years in prison!
     
    Hannah, Aug 2, 2007 IP
  19. rsuog

    rsuog Peon

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    #19
    why is that? everything seems legal to me - i mean using offshore company + offshore bank account

    any lawyers here?
     
    rsuog, Aug 2, 2007 IP
  20. AstarothSolutions

    AstarothSolutions Peon

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    #20
    Ok.... offshoring, whilst the company retains the money there is no tax to pay which is fine if you intend to use the companies earnings as a savings account. As soon as you draw any money out of the company however it is then a form of income and so tax would have to be paid as per the country you are domacile in.

    I have used this type of setup before but I knew when I set the company up that it would be run for 2 years, I would draw no money out of it and I would then liquidate the company. I had to pay capital gains tax on the money but you get a capital gains allowance each year which is tax free and seperate from your income, was able to split it between myself and my partner and so get 2 capital gains allowances and my partner had a larger shareholding which meant more of the money went her way as a lower rate tax payer.

    The offshoring simply saved us the corporation tax rather than any income tax - the rest of it could have been done with the company being set up in the UK
     
    AstarothSolutions, Aug 3, 2007 IP