Changing from self employed to an LLC


1

At the moment I work self employed as a web developer creating websites.

One such website has become fairly popular and I'm considering adding trademarks etc, is it possible/straightforward to switch from being self employed to an LLC?

How would I go about making this change in the UK?

LLC Tax Business

asked May 1 '12 at 01:08
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Silver89
106 points
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  • Self-employed and LLC are separate issues. You will still be self-employed if you own an LLC. You might want to do some research online first. – Zuly Gonzalez 12 years ago

2 Answers


1

If you create a limited liability company it becomes a separate entity (a legal person) from you. The law treats its property and business as different from yours. Of course that is what you want because it means that, as a general rule, if the company becomes insolvent, that will not rebound on you. Its debts are not your debts.

What this means is that you don't "convert" your existing business into a limited company, rather you create a company and then transfer your business (or part of your business) to it. If tax is important to you, you might want to research how to do this so as to obtain the best tax outcomes. I'm a lawyer, so I am not the best person to ask - an accountant should know.

Setting up a limited company is easy. There are lots of websites that will do it for you electronically for tens of pounds. I'd suggest browsing what's available using a search engine. They all seem much the same. You can do it yourself, but if your time has any value, reading the Companies House guidance (which is good) will probably be less cost-effective.

I think you need to work out why you would want to do this. Its perfectly sensible if you want to reduce your risk from a website which is becoming commercially significant. A limited company doesn't insulate you from all risk. You might find either taking some specific advice or asking more focussed questions (here or on other forums) would help.

Good luck.

answered Jun 2 '12 at 08:22
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Francis Davey
246 points

0

An LLC provides protection as the name implies "Limited Liability Company". It simply means that if any lawsuits come against the company, they do not directly affect you personally if you are operating legally.

The easiest way to do this in the UK is to use:

http://www.businesslink.gov.uk/bdotg/action/detail?itemId=1086687162&type=PIP However, there are other options listed here:

http://www.companieshouse.gov.uk/infoAndGuide/companyRegistration.shtml Good Luck!

answered May 3 '12 at 00:09
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Genome21
36 points

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