| Страници во темата: [1 2] > | Poll: Are you officially registered as a business? Лице кое објавува дискусија: ProZ.com Staff
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This forum topic is for the discussion of the poll question "Are you officially registered as a business?".
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with all the benefits of saving tax | | | |
I'm not sure I understand the question. "As a business" meaning do I own a (one-person) company? No. Am I registered as a self-employed (running a business)? Yes; wouldn't it be illegal not to be registered in most (all?) countries? | | | |
M. Anna Kańduła wrote:
I'm not sure I understand the question. "As a business" meaning do I own a (one-person) company? No. Am I registered as a self-employed (running a business)? Yes; wouldn't it be illegal not to be registered in most (all?) countries?
Not ifyou aredoing it as a "second job" part time, then it runs under your "normal" tax number and you are not a company - or at least here in Germany | | |
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Anne Bohy Франција Local time: 15:52 англиски на француски | Ambiguous question | Feb 21, 2014 |
This is a perfect example of a question which may sound clear in the context of a specific country, but becomes very ambiguous (and hard to translate) in a global context. | | | |
bohy wrote:
This is a perfect example of a question which may sound clear in the context of a specific country, but becomes very ambiguous (and hard to translate) in a global context.
I am officially registered since 1973 as an independent (autonomous) personal services provider in Brazil. Would that be a "business"?
According to Brazilian law, it's not. My tax ID is personal, not corporate. However I am authorized to issue all documents legally required for my clients' accounting purposes, and we'll have to pay all taxes and social charges on them. It's not merely a 'receipt', nor cash passed under the table.
However I understand that each country allows people to work on their own in a different manner.
[Edited at 2014-02-21 09:56 GMT] | | | | | Question unclear | Feb 21, 2014 |
I answered "yes", because in Germany you do have to notify your tax office that you are working as a freelancer ("Anmeldung einer selbständigen Tätigkeit"), although it's incredibly easy and, as Michael Harris wrote, it doesn't even involve getting a new or separate tax number for your "business" (which, however, is not a "Gewerbe" - so maybe it's not a business at all). | | | | Diana Coada (X) Обединето Кралство Local time: 14:52 португалски на англиски + ... | My thoughts exactly | Feb 21, 2014 |
M. Anna Kańduła wrote:
Unclear
I'm not sure I understand the question. "As a business" meaning do I own a (one-person) company? No. Am I registered as a self-employed (running a business)? Yes; wouldn't it be illegal not to be registered in most (all?) countries? | | |
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bohy wrote:
This is a perfect example of a question which may sound clear in the context of a specific country, but becomes very ambiguous (and hard to translate) in a global context.
Exactly, because
Michael Harris wrote:
Not ifyou aredoing it as a "second job" part time, then it runs under your "normal" tax number and you are not a company - or at least here in Germany
While in the UK you need to register still and pay due taxes and national insurance from both employment and freelancing. | | | | Allison Wright (X) Португалија Local time: 14:52 | Also unclear | Feb 21, 2014 |
In Portugal, there is a legal (and taxable) category called "trabalhador independente", or "independent worker" into which fall all self-employed people. I am registered as such at the tax department and at the social security office. Above a very low threshold, one has to charge VAT which, in my mind at least, makes me a business.
One's individual tax identification number is the only number required for this process of working your butt off in order to funnel money with mind-numbi... See more In Portugal, there is a legal (and taxable) category called "trabalhador independente", or "independent worker" into which fall all self-employed people. I am registered as such at the tax department and at the social security office. Above a very low threshold, one has to charge VAT which, in my mind at least, makes me a business.
One's individual tax identification number is the only number required for this process of working your butt off in order to funnel money with mind-numbing regularity to the State.
I cannot say that the tax structure in Portugal favours the entrepreneur, whether translator or not. ▲ Collapse | | | | DianeGM Local time: 16:52 холандски на англиски + ...
I am also confused by the question.
In Greece there is no other legal way to operate. | | | | | Yes but no but yes | Feb 21, 2014 |
As a freelance translator in the UK you don't have to register your business.
You do have to register as self-employed for national insurance, but that's all. You also need to tell the taxman what profit you've made and pay tax on it - but you don't have to register, and how you earned the profit (whether through translation or cleaning or juggling) is immaterial. Your business is not a separate legal entity and cannot therefore be registered in any way.
That said, we a... See more As a freelance translator in the UK you don't have to register your business.
You do have to register as self-employed for national insurance, but that's all. You also need to tell the taxman what profit you've made and pay tax on it - but you don't have to register, and how you earned the profit (whether through translation or cleaning or juggling) is immaterial. Your business is not a separate legal entity and cannot therefore be registered in any way.
That said, we are registered as a business, as we operate through a limited company, which seemed a good idea at the time and isn't worth changing now. ▲ Collapse | | |
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Tim Drayton (X) Кипар Local time: 16:52 турски на англиски + ...
There is no such thing as an officially registered business here in Cyprus. You just need to register with the tax office and, as the VAT threshold is very low, you will almost certainly need to register with the VAT office, too. Once you have a tax number and a VAT number, you are up and running! | | | | Tim Drayton (X) Кипар Local time: 16:52 турски на англиски + ... | Social insurance | Feb 21, 2014 |
Tim Drayton wrote:
There is no such thing as an officially registered business here in Cyprus. You just need to register with the tax office and, as the VAT threshold is very low, you will almost certainly need to register with the VAT office, too. Once you have a tax number and a VAT number, you are up and running!
Oh, and you have to register with the social insurance office, too. I have done all that and have all three numbers. | | | | neilmac Шпанија Local time: 15:52 шпански на англиски + ...
I am registered with the tax and social security authorities as a freelance self-employed ("autonomous") translator. Business is what I do sometimes, not what I am.
To misquote Nº Six in The Prisoner: "I am not a business, I am a free man!" | | | | | Страници во темата: [1 2] > | To report site rules violations or get help, contact a site moderator: You can also contact site staff by submitting a support request » Poll: Are you officially registered as a business? | CafeTran Espresso | You've never met a CAT tool this clever!
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