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You need to consider the implications of possibly having the company becoming UK tax resident, and liable to UK corporation taxes, if you are a director and become UK tax resident.
There are special tax rules (IR35) for UK companies providing services, and you may fall under that.
The Irish company that you set up will have Irish PAYE obligations for your salary - and also will have obligations to operate UK PAYE.
This is a complex area, and you need to consider UK tax issues in addition to Irish tax issues.
You would need to discuss with your accountant whether the concept of a "permanent estalishment" might arise in UK due to the nature of your business activities there. If a permanent establishment arises, the Irish company maybe required to submit UK tax returns. A permanent establishment can include an office or other place of management or a branch of your business, amongst other things.
The 91 day rule, as a concession, allows days of arrival and departure to be excluded, but this is only a concession.............. HMRC have the right to take these days into account if they feel the concession is being abused.
The permanent establishment issue would be separate from your personal residence, and will depend on where management and control of company is held, and where contracts are concluded in addition to other factors.
where a dual PAYE system needs to be operated as you described does this mean you actually pay twice as much PAYE or is it just that its split between both tax authorities (with more administrative costs presumably)?
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