Andy Gilder wrote:
Certainly to HMRC - you...erm, sorry he or she... will need to register as self employed and file a tax return.
As far as the US tax position is concerned, your "friend" should check it out with the US company they are going to be dealing with. If the sale contract for the product is going to be between the US company and the end customer who buys it off their website, I'd say it's their responsibility to account for state and federal taxes on the sale.
Your mythical friend isn't going to be resident in the US for tax purposes, neither do they have a business that's resident in the US. They're a UK business providing a product to a US customer, who is then selling it on their behalf.
Hmm,
The first bit is sorted despite it going totally against everything my old man taught me
I've (I mean he) emailed the American company to ask their opinion/experience, I suspect they might not know because they only seem to act for US or Canadian citizens, the end client purchases direct from their web site and deals with them as a company on their terms and conditions, the payment goes to their bank account, but as a company they don't buy the product from me, I (oh bugger it, its me) hold it here until its sold, I ship it to the US direct to the end client and then I get paid 30 days later from the US company, less their commission and credit card fees.
Technically their "sale" is for the commission and I can't help but think that there is a large portion of the transaction that isn't going to be accounted for in their tax returns, the last thing I need right now is another tax demand from a different country, I've got my hands full with HMRC