This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience. Please read our policies for more information.

10 Chartered Accountants

News

Payroll sector prepares for key changes in 2019/20
21 February 2019

The next 12 months will see a number of new changes to payroll policy that could have an impact on a wide range of businesses.

To give an overview of how businesses could be affected by these changes, below are some of the highlights that employers will need to prepare for.

Private Sector IR35

From April 2020, where an individual is engaged by a medium or large-sized business in the private sector and works through a company, the employer will be responsible for assessing the individual’s employment status under the off-payroll working rules (IR35).

Where the rules apply, the business or agency will be responsible for deducting income tax and National Insurance contributions (NICs) via PAYE and will be required to pay employer NICs.

Businesses will be able to use the Check Employment Status for Tax (CEST) service, which is available to help businesses determine whether the off-payroll working rules apply. These new rules will not affect small businesses.

Postgraduate Loans (PGL)

From April 2019, taxpayers will be required to start repaying PGLs if they meet the threshold of £21,000 (England and Wales only). If they do meet the threshold, a deduction of six per cent will be taken from their wages.

The existing starter checklist provided by the Government will be updated to include a section for PGL. Employees’ P60 forms will also be changed to include a new box for PGL deductions, however, the existing P45 form will remain the same.

Parental Bereavement Leave and Pay

Employers will have to get to grips with a new workplace right to Parental Bereavement Leave and Pay for parents who lose a child under the age of 18.

This new right will include parents who have suffered a stillbirth after 24 weeks of pregnancy.

Those who qualify for the new right, which will commence from 6 April 2020, will be entitled to two weeks of paid Parental Bereavement Leave.

During this period, they will be paid at the statutory flat weekly rate of £145.18 or 90 per cent of average earnings (whichever is lower), if the person has at least 26 weeks continuous service at the date of their child’s death and earnings above the Lower Earnings Limit.

Other recent news

Five steps to growing your business, safely
15 April 2024

There is an inherent degree of risk in any business…
Read more

Are barriers to investment harming your productivity?
15 April 2024

A survey by the Bank of England (BoE) and the…
Read more

A third of UK business owners do not know their company’s value – do you?
15 April 2024

New research by Marktlink suggests that around 33 per cent…
Read more

HMRC income tax receipts rise by £2 billion
15 April 2024

HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) recently reported a £2 billion…
Read more

Redundancy regulations are changing – What it means for your payroll and policies
15 April 2024

From 6 April 2024, UK redundancy rules will change, particularly…
Read more

»

Case Studies