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We've scoured the web to get you the most up-to-date advice which includes the most useful tools on offer from the officials themselves.

Effective tax planning is essential if you are to minimise your tax bills. Simple tax planning can significantly reduce your tax liabilities.

The self-assessment tax return is an unavoidable burden if you are liable for self-employed tax or have complicated income tax affairs.

Corporation tax is charged on a company's profits. If you trade as a limited company, ensure that paying this tax is as painless as possible.

National Insurance Contributions (NICs) are payable whether you are self-employed or employed by your own company, although different rates apply.

As well as your legal obligations, you’ll want to ensure that payroll is painless and that you use any opportunities to improve your tax-efficiency.

VAT

Effective VAT planning aims to ensure that VAT is relatively painless, and that you are reclaiming as much as possible of the VAT you pay.

Capital gains are made when you sell something for more money than you paid for it. As a result, you can be subject to tax. Take professional advice.

Business property taxes apply to businesses with commercial premises.There are two commercial property taxes: business rates and stamp duty land tax.

If you have tax problems or face a tax investigation, it pays to seek professional advice and you must act rather than just hoping for the best.

Small businesses lead the way on ecommerce

25 April 2023

A new report on the digital economy has found that UK firms' online sales doubled between 2014 and 2021, with individual website sales eclipsing sales via online marketplaces such as Amazon.

A new report by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) has found that online sales made by UK businesses have more than doubled in recent years - from £227.4bn in 2014 to £459.2bn in 2021. Website sales boomed in 2021, with the value of British-based businesses' online sales to UK customers reaching £381.4bn and sales to overseas shoppers adding a further £77.8bn.

Analysis of the data by home delivery expert ParcelHero suggests that sales made via websites "far eclipsed online marketplace results" and it says that small firms (with ten or less employees) also "punched well above their weight".

The ONS findings show that in 2021:

  • 34% of all retailers sold online;
  • 18% of wholesalers made online sales;
  • 16% of manufacturers used ecommerce to sell their products;
  • 8% of information and communication businesses sold online.

The report suggests that the UK's smallest and largest businesses have benefitted the most from the online boom. The data shows that 41% of all businesses employing over 1,000 people sell online, achieving UK website sales of £210.5bn in 2021. At the other end of the scale, micro-businesses employing fewer than ten people sold an impressive £49.2bn of products and services online in the UK in 2021.

One in ten small firms sell online

"That's an astonishing achievement by the nation's smallest employers," said David Jinks, ParcelHero's head of consumer research. "In fact, UK micro-businesses' online sales far eclipsed those of larger businesses employing up to 249 employees (£18.2bn).

"UK companies' sales on their own websites and apps significantly exceeded those achieved on online marketplaces and social media sites in 2021. Their domestic website sales were worth £353.8bn. In contrast, their marketplace sales were worth £25.2bn and their social media sales just £2.2bn. Considering the focus many businesses placed on social media in 2021 (at the peak of COVID lockdowns) that's a surprisingly low amount."

Selling in-store and online

David Jinks said: "Proportionately, our smallest businesses punched far above their weight in 2021. However, only 10% of Britain's smallest companies sell online, leaving many of our most treasured micro-businesses still without a web presence. As retail settles to a new equilibrium, it will be those retailers, large or small, with strong in-store and online sales that will ultimately triumph in a post-COVID world."

ParcelHero's report, 2030: Death of the High Street , concludes that, unless retailers develop an omnichannel approach, embracing both online and physical store sales, the High Street as we know it will reach a dead-end by 2030.

Written by Rachel Miller.

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