TaxAssist Accountants
0800 0523 5550800 0523 555

Tax-dodging footballers are "red rag to a bull", says tax expert

Date: 11th June 2009

Footballers may see the loophole closedHigh-earning professional football players planning to utilise a legal loophole and avoid the 50 per cent tax bracket should be wary, according to the tax profession.

The loophole in question currently allows footballers to accept their wages as an interest free loan from their clubs, which carries with it just 2.5 per cent tax.

In the future clubs could write off the loans and treat the payment as a salary. If the tax rate had been reduced at the time of the transfer, the players would pay tax at the new rate plus the 2.5 per cent.

This could potentially save the players large sums of money and see HMRC lose out.

Due to the level of publicity football receives in this country however, particularly the wage levels of the highest earners, such a move is not likely to go unnoticed by the government.

Richard Mannion, national tax director at Smith and Williamson, said: "It would be a red rag to a bull. The Revenue will look at it closely," according to Accountancy Age.

HMRC has yet to comment on the matter.

The 50 per cent tax rate is set for introduction in April 2010.

Premiership wages rose 23 per cent to a total of £1.2 billion in the 2007/08 season, according to Deloitte's annual review of football finance.


Related Articles



0800 0523 555 TaxAssist Accountants Locations Map
TaxAssist Facebook TaxAssist Twitter TaxAssist Blog RSS

Newsletter for Small Business

Join our newsletter and receive tax news every month suitable for small businesses.

Testimonials

View all

Over the past 10 years we believed that if we wanted outstanding service we should use traditional large accountancy firms. Oh how wrong we had been! We had been charged high fees without any real value being added to the business.
DAVE THOMAS
Bluegrass Consultancy Ltd

© 2012 TaxAssist Accountants. All Rights Reserved. TaxAssist Accountants Buy Local Campaign TaxAssist Accountants Supports Round Table Childrens Wish TaxAssist Accountants - Interactive Media Awards 2010 Best In Class Winner