ChatterBank5 mins ago
Is it illegal to...?
82 Answers
if you are claiming job seekers and you are looking for work BUT dont get any replies and you decide to start selling bits and bobs on ebay or gumtree and you make around £400 each month from doing it, is it against the law to still claim JSA? These are used items that are being sold, not new, and its not a business BUT makes good enough money to live a proper life off whilst not working
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by parrotlover. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.just to let you know, we're currently prosecuting someone for selling goods on Ebay, but it is someone who appears to be making quite a good income.
you do need to be careful. in my opinion (this is not professional advice as I'm unsure), selling bits from around your house may be acceptable, but Ebay will provide (if asked) a statement of transactions.
you do need to be careful. in my opinion (this is not professional advice as I'm unsure), selling bits from around your house may be acceptable, but Ebay will provide (if asked) a statement of transactions.
I've been doing a mental check of my home and I would be very hard put to raise £400 per month over a period by selling my non-essentials.
I'd get several thousand for my cars, which if I were claiming JSA, I would not declare to them, unless it was income-based JSA and not the 6 month contribution based.
If you are on any means tested benefit you should declare all monies you receive, but really would that include money raised from selling you car, or flogging your XBox and games to Cash Converters?
I don't know the answer, but have hopefully raised a question for those that do know.
As far as I am concerned selling your unwanted items on eBay is no different to flogging them to a second hand shop.
I'd get several thousand for my cars, which if I were claiming JSA, I would not declare to them, unless it was income-based JSA and not the 6 month contribution based.
If you are on any means tested benefit you should declare all monies you receive, but really would that include money raised from selling you car, or flogging your XBox and games to Cash Converters?
I don't know the answer, but have hopefully raised a question for those that do know.
As far as I am concerned selling your unwanted items on eBay is no different to flogging them to a second hand shop.
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
It would come down to an opinion based on a balance of probabilities I expect. I know nothing about JSA and how income affects benefits but I do know a bit about what the Revenue considers "trading as a business" and what it doesn't and I'd expect the judgement process to be the same really.
As others have said you can sell whatever you like from around your house, your car, etc and not be taxed on it. Theoretically it might fall under Capital Gains Tax but only if the item raises more than it originally cost plus inflation which seems unlikely (except with gifts which would have cost you nothing of course). Even then there is a significant exempt band of capital gains you can make before it would be taxed.
If you are buying to sell then you are trading and the Revenue would seek to tax you on profits accordingly. If you bought a single item as Eddie describes then no-one would care in reality as there'd be nothing to attract attention to it and it would be easy to claim you bought it for own use and then decided you didn't like the colour or something. It's about a pattern. If someone is making £400 or so profit every month for several months and buying the things in regularly within a short period before hand then it will be taken to be a "badge of trade" and presumed as such.
I would imagine if you were deemed to be trading then by definition you can't be Job seeking?
As others have said you can sell whatever you like from around your house, your car, etc and not be taxed on it. Theoretically it might fall under Capital Gains Tax but only if the item raises more than it originally cost plus inflation which seems unlikely (except with gifts which would have cost you nothing of course). Even then there is a significant exempt band of capital gains you can make before it would be taxed.
If you are buying to sell then you are trading and the Revenue would seek to tax you on profits accordingly. If you bought a single item as Eddie describes then no-one would care in reality as there'd be nothing to attract attention to it and it would be easy to claim you bought it for own use and then decided you didn't like the colour or something. It's about a pattern. If someone is making £400 or so profit every month for several months and buying the things in regularly within a short period before hand then it will be taken to be a "badge of trade" and presumed as such.
I would imagine if you were deemed to be trading then by definition you can't be Job seeking?
i dont buy in anything, its clothes clothes and more clothes! I have managed to hoard so much stuff over the years that ive started to sell it now, and also i sell on carboots sometimes, and sometimes i buy used clothes on carboots and sell them if i dont want them on ebay or privately to friends or on gumtree. £400 is nothing and its not all profit as i have to pay all the ebay fees and paypal fees. I just wanted to check if it was not allowed or can you be caught about it as its only a low amount? Sometimes its only £150-200 a month as ive been selling my items that are mine from home for around 5 months now