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Dmitry Sergeev2011-09-05 06:56:15
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Dmitry Sergeev, 2011-09-05 06:56:15

Paid services on the website of a legal entity: what should be in OKVED and should the site be on the balance sheet?

Work on receiving payment, of course, through the aggregator. You can conclude an agreement with him and withdraw money to a correspondent account. But what should be written in OKVED and should the site be on the balance sheet?

And if you don’t get confused and work as a private trader (let’s say I’m the owner of an LLC), that is, withdraw everything to electronic money and already cash it out, what problems can an LLC have?

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3 answer(s)
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Alexander, 2011-09-05
@Alexx_ps

Do you want to provide some services and accept money for them through the site using, say, Robokassa?
Then neither OKVED nor the balance has nothing to do with it. OKVED states what the company does.
In order to avoid disputes between the founders, it is better to put a website with a domain on the balance sheet, they will be listed as an intangible asset. But not a single customer has done this with us, because some accountants need a legally significant paper to own a domain, which does not exist in nature, because. domains. are essentially rented out.

K
Kindman, 2011-09-05
@Kindman

>> withdraw everything to electronic money and cash it already
Yes. Here the problem is just with "cashing out".
You need to determine a sufficient basis for such a "cash out".
It is not so easy to come to the bank and "remove" grandmas from the current account.
The basis may be an employment contract - and, accordingly, it will be possible to “withdraw” in the form of a salary (including bonuses, if there are too many grandmas), but, of course, you need to remember about deductions:
- to the tax
- to the pension fund
- to the social insurance
Not to mention the fact that for the very maintenance of the current account (in the presence of operations), the bank will take its money from the proceeds either in the form of a commission percentage or in the form of a “subscription fee”.

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lesha_penguin, 2011-09-05
@lesha_penguin

Tip: if you don’t have really good reasons why you need an LLC, then it’s better not to bother and work as an individual entrepreneur. As an individual entrepreneur, you can do almost everything, including accepting payments to a current account. But honesty and other hemorrhoids, as an individual entrepreneur, will be many times less than in the case of an LLC / CJSC.
Not to mention the fact that an individual entrepreneur can “just put the money that came to him into his pocket” (because “you” in the case of an individual entrepreneur are “our own company”), and in the case of an LLC this will not work - since “you” are separate , and "LLC" - separately.

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