Accountants for UK Healthcare Professionals
In the UK, medical professionals including dentists, consultants, hospital doctors, GPs, locums, surgeons, as well as in some cases nurses, midwives, and other specialists and non-specialists in the medical field, ‒ may work for themselves or receive remuneration through the PAYE system.
Some work through an agency or through their own limited company or receive their salary through the PAYE system of the organisation for which they work as well as earning other income by running a private medical practice. It is essential to be aware of the pitfalls as well as the benefits of working in private practice as a healthcare professional, whether through a limited company full time, or part-time alongside a PAYE salary.
What is meant by medical accounting?
Healthcare Accounting is primarily an accounting that is concerned with collecting and reporting financial data about medical organisations. Financial report preparation is performed by professional accountants and tax experts in the medical profession.
HealthCare Accounting Services
Specialist medical accountants will keep you informed of all the changes that affect compliance as well as ensuring that all the income you work hard to earn works extremely hard for you too.
Target Accounting is one such specialist healthcare accountant, but while it is one among many, it is virtually unique in its approach to delivering services that come with a no-penalties, and complete satisfaction guarantee, Saturday opening, no limit on its helpline services, and full range of free cloud bookkeeping and accounting software, to name but some of the many benefits. We appreciate that the approach to taxation and accounts for healthcare professionals needs individual, focussed attention to help minimise specific challenges among this sector of the UK professional workforce.
For example, We can advise on practice premises transactions, concerns over stamp duty for instance, look after your payroll tax returns, help you wheel out workplace pensions, and so on. The BMA provides useful advice about some of the complexities of running a practice in terms of compliance, and their Setting up in Private Practice guide is very useful with regard to what you should consider before doing so.