IR35 Guide UK — Off-Payroll Working Rules Explained
What IR35 is, how it works, who it affects, and how to determine your IR35 status. Essential reading for contractors, freelancers, and businesses using contractors.
·4 min read
IR35 is one of the most significant tax considerations for UK contractors and freelancers working through a limited company. Getting it wrong can result in substantial tax bills, penalties, and business disruption.
How IR35 Works
Concept
Detail
Purpose
Prevents tax avoidance by disguised employees
Who it affects
Contractors working through intermediaries (usually Ltd companies)
The test
Would the contractor be an employee if directly engaged?
Inside IR35
Taxed similarly to an employee
Outside IR35
Benefits from limited company tax structure
Key Tests for IR35 Status
HMRC and tribunals consider three main factors:
1. Control
Factor
Outside IR35
Inside IR35
How the work is done
You decide the method
Client dictates methods
When you work
You set your own hours
Client sets your hours
Where you work
Your choice
Client specifies location
Supervision
Minimal or none
Regular oversight
2. Substitution
Factor
Outside IR35
Inside IR35
Right to send a substitute
Yes (genuine, unfettered right)
No — client expects you personally
Substitute must be accepted by client
No unreasonable refusal
Client can refuse
Who pays the substitute
You pay them
Not applicable
Has substitution occurred?
Evidence of actual substitution strengthens position
Never substituted
3. Mutuality of Obligation (MOO)
Factor
Outside IR35
Inside IR35
Client must offer work
No obligation (project-based)
Ongoing expectation of work
You must accept work
No obligation
Expected to accept
Between engagements
No pay, no obligation
Retained or on standby
Additional Factors
Factor
Outside IR35
Inside IR35
Financial risk
You bear risk (e.g. fix defects at own cost)
Client bears risk
Equipment
You provide your own
Client provides everything
Part of the organisation
Separate business identity
Integrated into client team
Exclusivity
Free to work for others simultaneously
Cannot work for competitors
Benefits
No holiday pay, sick pay, pension
Receive employee-like benefits
Who Decides IR35 Status?
Client Type
Who Determines Status
Public sector
End client
Large/medium private company
End client
Small private company
Contractor decides their own status
Definition of Small Company
A company is “small” if it meets 2 of 3 criteria:
Criteria
Threshold
Annual turnover
£10.2 million or less
Balance sheet total
£5.1 million or less
Employees
50 or fewer
Tax Impact
Inside IR35
Component
Treatment
Income tax
Deducted via PAYE
Employee’s NI
Deducted via PAYE
Employer’s NI
Paid by the fee-payer (agency/client)
5% expense allowance
Flat-rate deduction from deemed payment
Pension
No employer pension contribution
Holiday/sick pay
None
Comparison: Inside vs Outside IR35
Component (£600/day, 220 days)
Outside IR35
Inside IR35
Gross annual fees
£132,000
£132,000
Corporation Tax
~£23,000
N/A
Salary
~£12,570
N/A
Dividends
~£80,000
N/A
PAYE deductions
N/A
~£55,000
Approximate take-home
~£85,000–£90,000
~£72,000–£77,000
Tax difference
~£13,000–£18,000 less
Illustrative figures — actual amounts depend on individual circumstances.
CEST Tool
HMRC’s Check Employment Status for Tax tool:
Detail
Info
What it is
HMRC’s online tool to determine IR35 status
How it works
Answer questions about working arrangements
Result
“Employed for tax purposes” / “Self-employed” / “Undetermined”
Binding?
HMRC says it will stand by the result if information is accurate
Criticism
Often returns “undetermined”; does not fully consider MOO
Recommendation
Use CEST as a starting point; get professional advice for borderline cases
Protecting Your IR35 Status
Action
Purpose
Written contract reflecting reality
Evidence of working arrangements
Right of substitution clause (and exercise it)
Demonstrates you are not personally providing services
No mutuality of obligation
Project-based, no ongoing commitment
Use your own equipment
Shows independence
Work for multiple clients
Demonstrates business status
Bear financial risk
Fix defects at own cost, invoicing, bad debt risk
IR35 contract review
Professional review of your contract
Working practices review
Insurance or specialist assessment
Consequences of Getting It Wrong
Who
Risk
Contractor (small company)
HMRC investigation, back-tax, interest, penalties
End client (medium/large)
Liable for unpaid tax/NI if status determination is wrong
Agency
May be liable as fee-payer
Penalties
Offence
Penalty
Careless error
Up to 30% of unpaid tax
Deliberate error
Up to 70% of unpaid tax
Deliberate and concealed
Up to 100% of unpaid tax
Plus
Interest on unpaid amounts going back up to 6 years
Options If Inside IR35
Option
Detail
Umbrella company
Employed by umbrella; they handle PAYE; lower admin