Gemini Personal Tax Planning Guide Prompt
You are a tax planning educator who helps individuals understand and legally minimise their tax burden.
Category
💰 Finance
Difficulty
Intermediate
Models
3
Last Updated
2026-06-28
Works with
📄 Example output
⚠️ Common Mistakes
❓ FAQ
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📋 Prompt
You are a tax planning educator who helps individuals understand and legally minimise their tax burden.
DISCLAIMER: Educational only — not regulated tax advice. Consult a qualified accountant or tax adviser for personalised guidance.
Country: [country — UK/US/generic]
Income: [income type — employed/self-employed/mixed/investment]
Level: £/$/[income level]
Situation: [tax situation — first time self-employed/freelancer/business owner/investor]
Task: Create a personalised tax planning guide:
1. YOUR TAX OBLIGATIONS: What you owe and when
2. LEGAL TAX REDUCTION STRATEGIES:
- Allowances you should be using
- Deductions available for your income type
- Account types that reduce tax (ISA/SIPP/401k/IRA)
3. RECORD KEEPING SYSTEM: What to track and how
4. COMMON MISTAKES for your situation (and the penalties)
5. KEY DATES: Filing deadlines for your situation
6. WHEN TO GET PROFESSIONAL HELP: Signs you need an accountant
DISCLAIMER: Educational only — not regulated tax advice. Consult a qualified accountant or tax adviser for personalised guidance.
Country: [country — UK/US/generic]
Income: [income type — employed/self-employed/mixed/investment]
Level: £/$/[income level]
Situation: [tax situation — first time self-employed/freelancer/business owner/investor]
Task: Create a personalised tax planning guide:
1. YOUR TAX OBLIGATIONS: What you owe and when
2. LEGAL TAX REDUCTION STRATEGIES:
- Allowances you should be using
- Deductions available for your income type
- Account types that reduce tax (ISA/SIPP/401k/IRA)
3. RECORD KEEPING SYSTEM: What to track and how
4. COMMON MISTAKES for your situation (and the penalties)
5. KEY DATES: Filing deadlines for your situation
6. WHEN TO GET PROFESSIONAL HELP: Signs you need an accountant
TAX GUIDE: UK Self-Employed (sole trader), £45,000 income
DISCLAIMER: Educational only — not regulated tax advice. Consult a qualified accountant.
YOUR OBLIGATIONS:
Income Tax: On profits above personal allowance (£12,570 in 2025/26)
National Insurance: Class 2 (£3.45/week) + Class 4 (9% on £12,570–£50,270 profits)
Self Assessment: File annually by 31 January (online) for previous tax year
ATTAX £45,000 PROFIT ESTIMATE:
Personal allowance: £12,570 (0% tax)
Basic rate band: £32,430 at 20% = £6,486
Class 4 NI: (£45,000 − £12,570) × 9% = £2,919
Total tax + NI: ~£9,405 (21% effective rate)
LEGAL TAX REDUCTION:
1. Pension contributions: Every £800 contributed to SIPP → government adds £200 (25% tax relief). Reduces your taxable profit directly.
2. Business expenses: Deduct 100% of legitimate business costs (office costs, equipment, professional subscriptions, portion of home office, phone, travel for work)
3. Capital allowances: 100% first-year allowance on qualifying equipment (Annual Investment Allowance)
4. ISA: Tax-free investment growth up to £20,000/year. Doesn't reduce this year's tax but protects future investment income.
RECORD KEEPING:
Keep for 5+ years: All invoices, receipts, bank statements, mileage log
Track monthly: Income received, expenses paid, VAT (if applicable)
Tool: QuickBooks, FreeAgent, or even a well-organised spreadsheet
COMMON MISTAKES (and penalties):
❌ Missing 31 January deadline → automatic £100 penalty + interest
❌ Not putting aside 25–30% of income for tax as you earn
❌ Missing legitimate expenses — HMRC won't claim them for you
❌ Confusing business and personal bank accounts — creates accounting nightmare
DISCLAIMER: Educational only — not regulated tax advice. Consult a qualified accountant.
YOUR OBLIGATIONS:
Income Tax: On profits above personal allowance (£12,570 in 2025/26)
National Insurance: Class 2 (£3.45/week) + Class 4 (9% on £12,570–£50,270 profits)
Self Assessment: File annually by 31 January (online) for previous tax year
ATTAX £45,000 PROFIT ESTIMATE:
Personal allowance: £12,570 (0% tax)
Basic rate band: £32,430 at 20% = £6,486
Class 4 NI: (£45,000 − £12,570) × 9% = £2,919
Total tax + NI: ~£9,405 (21% effective rate)
LEGAL TAX REDUCTION:
1. Pension contributions: Every £800 contributed to SIPP → government adds £200 (25% tax relief). Reduces your taxable profit directly.
2. Business expenses: Deduct 100% of legitimate business costs (office costs, equipment, professional subscriptions, portion of home office, phone, travel for work)
3. Capital allowances: 100% first-year allowance on qualifying equipment (Annual Investment Allowance)
4. ISA: Tax-free investment growth up to £20,000/year. Doesn't reduce this year's tax but protects future investment income.
RECORD KEEPING:
Keep for 5+ years: All invoices, receipts, bank statements, mileage log
Track monthly: Income received, expenses paid, VAT (if applicable)
Tool: QuickBooks, FreeAgent, or even a well-organised spreadsheet
COMMON MISTAKES (and penalties):
❌ Missing 31 January deadline → automatic £100 penalty + interest
❌ Not putting aside 25–30% of income for tax as you earn
❌ Missing legitimate expenses — HMRC won't claim them for you
❌ Confusing business and personal bank accounts — creates accounting nightmare
🏆
💡 Pro Tips
Best model for this prompt
Claude
Claude (Opus 4 / Sonnet 4)
Pay yourself a salary instead of drawing everything as profit if you set up a limited company — corporation tax is often lower than income tax
Put aside 25–30% of every self-employment payment immediately into a separate savings account — tax bills surprise people who don't
Pension contributions are the single most powerful tax reduction tool available to UK self-employed people — use them aggressively
Register for VAT voluntarily if you're close to the threshold — reclaiming VAT on purchases can be beneficial in some industries
Treating all income as spendable without accounting for tax — the most common cash flow crisis for new freelancers
Missing the self-assessment registration deadline (5 October after your first tax year of self-employment)
Not keeping business and personal finances separate — makes accounting slow and expensive
Forgetting that Class 4 NI is due in addition to income tax — people budget for income tax but forget NI
- Should I be a sole trader or limited company?Sole trader: simpler, less admin, good up to ~£30–40K profit. Limited company: more tax-efficient above ~£40K profit (corporation tax + salary/dividend split), but more admin cost and complexity. The crossover point depends on your specific circumstances — an accountant can calculate it for your numbers.
- Do I need an accountant?If you're straightforwardly employed: probably not. If you're self-employed with complex deductions, multiple income streams, or above £50K: yes, a good accountant saves more than they cost. The threshold: if your tax situation takes more than a day to sort out, professional help pays for itself.
- What expenses can I deduct as a self-employed person?Allowable expenses (must be wholly and exclusively for business): office costs, equipment, professional subscriptions, training relevant to your current trade, travel for work (not commuting), marketing, insurance, and a portion of home costs if you work from home. 'Mixed use' items (phone, car) can only claim the business proportion.
- What's the VAT threshold?UK 2025/26: £90,000 annual taxable turnover. Above this, you must register for VAT. Below this, registration is voluntary. Voluntary registration lets you reclaim VAT on purchases — beneficial if you buy a lot of equipment or your customers are VAT-registered businesses.