England and Wales > Your Budget > Business Budget > Stage 3: Drawings
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Tax Sheet (46KB)
When you deduct your average monthly costs from your average monthly receipts, you have a figure for profit before tax.
In order to work out how much you can afford to draw from the business each month, it is wise to make a rough calculation of how much tax you will have to pay and to keep this amount aside for when the tax bill comes in. You can also roughly work out how much national insurance you will have to pay.
If you are a sole trader or in a partnership, you are taxed on profit before drawings, not how much (or little) you draw from the business. The tax position is different for limited companies – phone us for advice.
It is our experience at Business Debtline that many self-employed people get into difficulty paying their income tax and national insurance because they haven’t budgeted for it as a ‘cost of trading’ before they draw money for themselves.
If you do not take into account income tax and national insurance, this may give a false impression that you can earn more from your business than is actually possible.
Tax allowances change regularly. See our tax sheet for up-to-date details.
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