Online work to a US company - W8-BEN???
Online work to a US company - W8-BEN???
Author
Discussion

cheeky_chops

Original Poster:

1,613 posts

268 months

Wednesday 7th April 2021
quotequote all
Hi, a friend is trying to navigate getting paid by a US company.

She is a single employee/director of a UK ltd company and has run a online course with UK students, the company paying her are USA based and paying her in dollars. Their finance person has said she needs to register with the IRS/fill W8-BEN before she is paid. Her accountant hasnt any direct experience but has said be wary of registering with the IRS as they may be then wanting to tax her worldwide income!

Any advice/pointers on what she should/nt be doing? TIA

C350Akra

13,452 posts

297 months

Thursday 8th April 2021
quotequote all
She needs to be invoicing them in GBP, then it is their problem not hers. She operates a UK company operating in the UK, therefore should not need to register in the US.

MadCaptainJack

1,217 posts

57 months

Thursday 8th April 2021
quotequote all
Disclaimer: I am not a tax lawyer/expert.

She should not need to register with the IRS. She just needs to fill out a W-8BEN-E form (the -E version of the form is for "entities" - e.g. companies; if she were being paid as an individual, she'd need to fill out the W-8BEN version instead) and send it to the US company that will be paying her company.

The W-8BEN(-E) form simply certifies that she/her company isn't liable for US taxes. Filling one out is not a big deal - just a box-ticking exercise, albeit an essential one because, if she doesn't, the US company that's paying her/her company are obliged to withhold a certain % of the payment and send it to the IRS, and then she would have to go and claim it back from the IRS (which I can't imagine would be fun or anything other than glacially slow).

Edited by MadCaptainJack on Thursday 8th April 11:22

StevieBee

14,315 posts

272 months

Thursday 8th April 2021
quotequote all
C350Akra said:
She needs to be invoicing them in GBP, then it is their problem not hers. She operates a UK company operating in the UK, therefore should not need to register in the US.
Half of that is true!

It's normal - standard even for a UK company to be required to invoice a foreign client in whatever currency the client requests. Dollars, Euros or whatever are paid into the UK account and exchanged at the point of receipt.

However, assuming the arrangement was business to business then you are right in that there is no obligation on the UK company to register anything with the US tax authorities. All obligations on this rests with the client. It may be different if it was a personal assignment but as the work was done in the UK, I don't see how.

MadCaptainJack

1,217 posts

57 months

Thursday 8th April 2021
quotequote all
StevieBee said:
It's normal - standard even for a UK company to be required to invoice a foreign client in whatever currency the client requests. Dollars, Euros or whatever are paid into the UK account and exchanged at the point of receipt.
Agreed.

However, if she just gets the USD sent to her company's regular UK bank account, they'll convert it to GBP at a stty exchange rate (effectively taking ~3% of the money), so she should look into a service like Wise (formerly known as Transferwise).

C350Akra

13,452 posts

297 months

Thursday 8th April 2021
quotequote all
StevieBee said:
Half of that is true!

It's normal - standard even for a UK company to be required to invoice a foreign client in whatever currency the client requests. Dollars, Euros or whatever are paid into the UK account and exchanged at the point of receipt.

However, assuming the arrangement was business to business then you are right in that there is no obligation on the UK company to register anything with the US tax authorities. All obligations on this rests with the client. It may be different if it was a personal assignment but as the work was done in the UK, I don't see how.
For a small UK company I would not expect to have to invoice in a foreign currency, I would quote and invoice in GBP. Done this many times in the past.

StevieBee

14,315 posts

272 months

Thursday 8th April 2021
quotequote all
C350Akra said:
StevieBee said:
Half of that is true!

It's normal - standard even for a UK company to be required to invoice a foreign client in whatever currency the client requests. Dollars, Euros or whatever are paid into the UK account and exchanged at the point of receipt.

However, assuming the arrangement was business to business then you are right in that there is no obligation on the UK company to register anything with the US tax authorities. All obligations on this rests with the client. It may be different if it was a personal assignment but as the work was done in the UK, I don't see how.
For a small UK company I would not expect to have to invoice in a foreign currency, I would quote and invoice in GBP. Done this many times in the past.
I'm a small UK company working mostly internationally and I don't have an option. I tender / quote in either USD or EUR, invoice and get paid in either USD and EUR. Admittedly my clients are the likes of the World Bank, UN, EBRD, etc.. so may be different in a B2B context but certainly the projects we tender for stipulate the currency.

trickywoo

13,150 posts

247 months

Thursday 8th April 2021
quotequote all
I run a very similar business and have filled out a few w8-Ben forms over the years.

It’s not a big deal.

cheeky_chops

Original Poster:

1,613 posts

268 months

Friday 9th April 2021
quotequote all
cheers all - will go for the basics

The company have already set her day rate in $. She is hopefully doing more of the same for them (and a European company later in the year means expecting similar) therefore has a Revolut account

sgrimshaw

7,538 posts

267 months

Saturday 10th April 2021
quotequote all
trickywoo said:
I run a very similar business and have filled out a few w8-Ben forms over the years.

It’s not a big deal.
Not an issue if you're a ltd company, as a partnership or other non corporate entity it's a big no ... you have to register personally with the IRS !

As a partnership, we just uplift our daily rate when working on-site in the US and the client deducts 30% and sends it to Unlce Sam.

Only an issue if you supply services in the US and it's invoiced to a US based company ... for other customers, we invoice a sister companies elsewhere in the world to avoid the withholding tax. They save the 30% uplift and just cross charge it between their companies.

MadCaptainJack

1,217 posts

57 months

Saturday 10th April 2021
quotequote all
sgrimshaw said:
Not an issue if you're a ltd company, as a partnership or other non corporate entity it's a big no ... you have to register personally with the IRS !

As a partnership, we just uplift our daily rate when working on-site in the US and the client deducts 30% and sends it to Unlce Sam.

Only an issue if you supply services in the US and it's invoiced to a US based company ... for other customers, we invoice a sister companies elsewhere in the world to avoid the withholding tax. They save the 30% uplift and just cross charge it between their companies.
Whoah, whoah, whoah!!! Hold it right fking there!

First, you clearly don't know what you're talking about. Two, you are conflating two entirely different issues.

From what you've posted here, the reason you "have to register personally with the IRS" is because (a) you're operating through a partnership, and therefore the IRS considers that the beneficial recipients of the US-sourced income are the partners (i.e. they don't view the partnership to be its own "entity" in the same way that a company is), and more importantly (b) you are "working on-site in the US", which means that the income you receive from that work is classed by the IRS as Effectively Connected Income, which is a whole other ball of wax, and subject to US tax withholding. In order to claim it back, you have to register with the IRS.

If you were operating as a partnership but not working on-site in the US, you (and the other partners) would fill out individual W-8BEN forms, and there would be no withholding requirement, and no need to register with the IRS.

If you were operating as a company and working on-site in the US, the income would be subject to withholding, and the company (but probably not the individuals) would need to register with the IRS to claim the withheld income.

The OP's question relates to "a single employee/director of a UK ltd company" who "has run a online course with UK students". This is a completely different scenario to yours (sgrimshaw's), and unless they've left something out, it's clear that no work was performed in the US, therefore, the income is not effectively connected.

sgrimshaw

7,538 posts

267 months

Saturday 10th April 2021
quotequote all
MadCaptainJack said:
Whoah, whoah, whoah!!! Hold it right fking there!

First, you clearly don't know what you're talking about. Two, you are conflating two entirely different issues.
As you stated in an earlier post you are not a tax expert.

I know exactly what I am talking about.

To complete a W8-Ben as an individual or a partnership you need to register with the IRS to get an id number. I can't remember the exact name of the number and due to the attitude of your post I can't be fked to check.



BobToc

1,897 posts

134 months

Saturday 10th April 2021
quotequote all
Have done my W8-BEN for years and never had to have any interaction with the IRS. I don’t know what the impact is for companies, but as an individual it’s just reduced my withholding taxes.

Sheepshanks

37,798 posts

136 months

Saturday 10th April 2021
quotequote all
BobToc said:
Have done my W8-BEN for years and never had to have any interaction with the IRS. I don’t know what the impact is for companies, but as an individual it’s just reduced my withholding taxes.
Same. I have a personal US based investment account - I have to renew the W8-BEN every 3yrs, but that’s it.

As a ltd company most of our income for work done in the UK comes by invoicing US companies and is paid to our UK based dollar account. I’ve never heard of us being asked for W8-BEN forms and I’ve entirely handled some of the relationships myself.


I wonder if the US company realise they’re paying a company - perhaps they think she’s an individual? On the face of it the notion is ridiculous - it'd make it really awkward for US companies to buy stuff from outside the US.

Edited by Sheepshanks on Monday 12th April 09:29

MadCaptainJack

1,217 posts

57 months

Saturday 10th April 2021
quotequote all
sgrimshaw said:
To complete a W8-Ben as an individual or a partnership you need to register with the IRS to get an id number.
100% wrong. I’ve been filling out W8-BENs for years as an individual. I’ve never had to register with the IRS.

Ean218

2,023 posts

267 months

Monday 12th April 2021
quotequote all
MadCaptainJack said:
100% wrong. I’ve been filling out W8-BENs for years as an individual. I’ve never had to register with the IRS.
Agreed, it is just a form that the paying company keeps on file in case they are ever asked.

Spinner20

118 posts

137 months

Sunday 16th May 2021
quotequote all
The OP just needs to complete the form using the details
of the UK LTD company. It is difficult/confusing to fill out 100% correctly if you don’t know what you are doing. A basic thing is just knowing that US TIN = UK UTR for example as well as all the other bits to the form including the schedule of the tax act to quote.

It is a compliance thing for US businesses so they can claim to have correctly not deducted tax when paying.

Much confusion in the post with people claiming currency makes a difference to tax treatment which it doesn’t etc