No, you clearly explain yourself like a tongue-twisted psych patient. You were referring to sole props in your post and the inference was clear to anyone who speaks English...
Keep calm DJ. You will give yourself an infarction.
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No, you clearly explain yourself like a tongue-twisted psych patient. You were referring to sole props in your post and the inference was clear to anyone who speaks English...
Good article. My wife and I share the profits 50/50 and it is not excessive. We both work the same hours and do the same work. SARS did question it in the beginning but one email to them was all it took. We are totally above board.
Until SARS change their minds..
Its not legal, period. You are currently flying under the radar, that is all.
But now as hubby is earning more, she can save her wages and buy in and become a Partner. She will have a "loan account" and be able to withdraw more wages.
In the situation described by Marco above it appears to be 100% legal. There are situations where SARS could consider a partnership to be an income splitting scheme which could lead them to try and apportion all or the majority of the income to one spouse - however if both parties have a similar involvement in the business at a management level they will have a hard time disputing the terms of the partnership agreement irrespective the quantum of the income or profits earned by each party. Over the past 40 odd years I have handled numerous clients who run businesses in partnerships between spouses and have never had the income apportionment questioned.
I think your problem is that you don't know how to explain these things because you don't quite understand what you are talking about. She doesn't have to save her wages to buy into the partnership and one doesn't deposit, nor withdraw wages from a loan account...
That money is shown in the books as a "Loan Account". She does not withdraw from it. She will be a legal Partner and Husband and Wife can share the profits 50/50 to lesson the tax burden..
Don't comment on stuff you know zilch about DJ.
I'm well aware of what a loan account is, marco. I am also well aware that a loan account does not manage wages, which was your statement.
I can assure you that this is an area of business that I am well versed in. See this is another of these incidents where people have to correct you, and you go on the attack thereafter. Please stop trolling the business & finance forum now...
This is what I said.
She will have a "loan account" and be able to withdraw more wages.
I did not say that she can withdraw from the Loan Account.
As the husband cannot donate 50% of the business to the wife, she will have to buy into the business with her own money.
She then becomes a partner and they share the profits happily ever after.
Geez. DJ. Are you so thick in your head that after trying to explain to you twice, you still don't understand that I KNOW that a loan account cannot be used for wages. If you withdraw it then you have to pay it back or pay tax on it. Now stop it with this loan account thing.
Amend the partnership agreement????? What a load of twat. That will be as good as donating 50% to your wife.
Have you been drinking?
Took you awhile DJ. I explained myself quite perfectly but it seems that you have a short memory as the crux of the threads seem to change very quickly and you don't follow the changes. Pity actually as the OP must by now be having a nervous breakdown. He has not been back. I don't blame him.
What led me to this is that my wife and I have a large diffs in our investments. She has 4 times more than I have.
I phoned my broker to transfer shares into my account from hers. This can be done, he told me. But the gains from this will be hers as per SARS.