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The United Kingdom (UK), comprising England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland, is known for its rich history, diverse culture, and influential global economy. As a prominent hub for finance, innovation, and international trade, the UK continues to attract businesses and talent from around the world.
In 2025, a particularly notable trend in the UK market is the significant growth of sustainable and green technologies. Driven by ambitious government targets aiming for net-zero emissions by 2050, there has been substantial investment and innovation in renewable energy, electric transportation, and green finance sectors. This shift presents numerous opportunities for businesses committed to sustainability and environmental responsibility.
In this publication, we provide a key overview of taxes in the UK, to help businesses better navigate the fiscal landscape.
Anyone can purchase real estate in the UK, including both residents and citizens, who face no restrictions on buying residential or commercial property. Overseas buyers—those who are not UK residents—are also generally allowed to acquire property in England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. However, non-UK residents are subject to additional requirements, such as a 2% surcharge on Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) for residential property purchases, in addition to the standard rates.
Overseas buyers may also find that lenders require larger deposits, typically between 25% and 40%, to secure financing. In some cases, transactions involving agricultural land or heritage properties may require local planning or heritage authority approval. Additionally, companies—including UK-registered businesses, foreign companies with a UK branch, and special-purpose vehicles (SPVs)—can acquire real estate but must comply with corporation tax and SDLT regulations.
The UK offers several common legal forms for businesses, each with distinct features. A Sole Trader is the simplest structure, owned and operated by one person, with minimal set-up requirements but unlimited personal liability. Partnerships involve two or more individuals sharing both profits and liabilities, governed either by a partnership agreement or the Partnership Act 1890.
For those seeking limited liability, a Limited Liability Partnership (LLP) combines partnership flexibility with protection for its members. LLPs require formal registration with Companies House and allow members to manage the business directly. The Private Company Limited by Shares (Ltd) is the most popular choice for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). Shareholders’ liability is restricted to unpaid share capital, and the company must submit formal accounts and annual returns.
Public Limited Companies (PLC) can offer shares to the public and are subject to stricter disclosure and governance requirements, including a minimum share capital of £50,000. Lastly, overseas companies may establish a UK Branch, which operates within the UK but is not a separate legal entity; the parent company remains liable for its obligations.
| Payrolls and Contribution | Employee | Employer |
| Income tax | 20%, 40% or 25% | 0% |
| Social Security contribution | 8% | 15% |
| Social (Pension) insurance contribution | 5% | 3% |
| Main features of employment relationship | Applicable law | |
| Contract type | Permanent, Fixed-Term, Part-Time, Zero-Hours, Agency | Employment Rights Act 1996
Fixed-term Employees (Prevention of Less Favourable Treatment) Regulations 2002
Part-time Workers (Prevention of Less Favourable Treatment) Regulations 2000
Conduct of Employment Agencies and Employment Businesses Regulations 2003
Working Time Regulations 1998
Working Time Regulations 1998 (Regulations 13–16)
Employment Rights Act 1996 (notice provisions) Employment Rights Act 1996 (sections 86–89) |
| Contract must include | Names of parties, start date, role and duties, place of work, and remuneration details | |
| Working time | Hours of work (weekly/daily), patterns (shifts, flexitime), rest breaks, and entitlement to rest periods under Working Time Regulations 1998 | |
| Holiday entitlement per year | Minimum 5.6 weeks’ paid leave per year (pro-rated for part-time), plus any contractual enhancements | |
| Trial period | Duration (commonly 3–6 months), objectives, review process, and notice during probation | |
| Notice Period | Statutory minimum (one week after one month’s service) or contractual notice (whichever is greater), for both employee and employer |
For the financial year beginning 1 April 2025, UK companies pay Corporation Tax at the following rates:
These thresholds are proportionately adjusted for accounting periods shorter than 12 months or where there are “associated” companies gov.uk.
A company is considered as a UK tax resident, if it is either incorporated in the UK or its business is centrally controlled and managed in the United Kingdom.
Taxable income for UK companies includes profits from trades, professions or vocations carried on in the United Kingdom, together with non-trading investment income such as interest, dividends, and rental income from UK properties. Additionally, profits from the disposal of assets (known as chargeable gains) are included, with allowable costs deducted from the proceeds.
The calculation of taxable income starts with the accounting profit as shown in the company’s financial statements. Disallowable expenses, such as entertaining costs and fines, are then added back. Allowable deductions and capital allowances are subtracted, and net chargeable gains (after accounting for losses and indexation) are incorporated. Adjustments are made for group relief, loss relief, and controlled foreign company (CFC) charges, in accordance with relevant legislation, including the Corporation Tax Act 2009 and the Corporation Tax Act 2010 (Parts 2 and 3).
Non-resident companies are subject to UK tax only on profits that arise from UK sources. This includes profits generated through a UK permanent establishment, which refers to a branch, office, or any other fixed place of business located in the United Kingdom. In addition, income and gains from UK land or property are taxable regardless of whether the company has a permanent establishment in the UK.
Certain types of income, such as interest, royalties, and branch profits, may be subject to specific withholding tax obligations and branch profit rules. These requirements are set out in the Corporation Tax Act 2010 (Part 5, Chapter 2), the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992, and the Income Tax Act 2007 (Part 9).
The tax period in the United Kingdom is the accounting period.
Corporation Tax deadlines for UK companies are determined by the end of the accounting period, which is the date to which financial statements are prepared. After identifying your accounting period end date, you have 12 months from that date to submit your Company Tax Return (CT600). For example, if your accounting period ends on 31 December 2024, your CT600 must be filed by 31 December 2025.
The payment of Corporation Tax is due 9 months and 1 day after the accounting period ends. Using the same example, if your accounting period ends on 31 December 2024, your tax payment deadline will be 1 October 2025.
For UK companies, the method of paying Corporation Tax depends on the level of profits. Companies with profits up to £1.5 million pay their tax in a single payment, due nine months and one day after the end of the accounting period. However, companies with profits above £1.5 million (with thresholds reduced if the company is part of a group) must make advance payments in the form of quarterly instalments.
Standard large companies, whose profits are above £1.5 million but do not exceed £20 million, pay Corporation Tax in four instalments. These are due in the 7th, 10th, 13th, and 16th months following the start of the accounting period. Very large companies, with profits exceeding £20 million, are required to pay in 12 monthly instalments, each falling one month after the start of the accounting period. Companies with profits not exceeding £1.5 million generally make a single payment after the period end.
To calculate each instalment, the company should first estimate its total Corporation Tax liability for the period and divide this by the required number of instalments. Each payment is then made on its due date. The final instalment is adjusted to reflect the actual tax liability once the Company Tax Return (CT600) is filed.
There are further considerations for companies with accounting periods shorter than 12 months, as both the number and timing of instalments are adjusted proportionately. In addition, if a company is part of a group, the relevant profit thresholds for instalment payments are divided between the associated companies to determine their payment obligations.
A deductible expense for UK Corporation Tax purposes is any cost that is “wholly and exclusively” incurred in the day-to-day running of your trade. In practice, this means you can generally deduct staff salaries and employer NICs, business-related rent and utilities, office and administration costs (stationery, software, professional fees), marketing and travel expenses (with supporting receipts), repairs that maintain but do not improve assets, training and recruitment fees, and finance costs such as bank charges and qualifying loan interest (subject to the Corporate Interest Restriction rules). These deductions, together with capital allowances on qualifying plant, machinery or fixtures, are offset against your accounting profit to arrive at your taxable profit.
From 1 April 2025 onwards, UK companies may carry forward trading losses indefinitely and set them against future profits of the same trade, subject to the following key rules:
These provisions are set out in Corporation Tax Act 2010 (Part 2, Chapter 3), as amended by Finance Act 2016 (introducing the 50% cap) and remain unchanged for periods beginning in 2025.
UK companies do not withhold tax on dividend distributions to resident shareholders. Individual recipients pay tax on dividend income above their annual allowance.
The rates for 2025–26 are:
The UK does not levy withholding tax on dividends, interest or royalties paid to non-resident companies under domestic law. Amounts paid are gross, although treaty provisions may override this. Recipients must ensure they meet any treaty conditions to benefit from reduced treaty rates.
All UK dividend distributions to both resident and non-resident corporate shareholders are paid gross with no UK withholding.
Interest paid by UK borrowers to both resident and non-resident lenders is paid gross with no UK withholding, subject to the requirement that the payment qualifies as “interest” under UK tax law and any relevant treaty definitions.
Royalty payments from UK sources to non-resident recipients are paid without UK withholding, provided they fall within the domestic definition; some royalty types may be recharacterized if paid in non-ordinary-course arrangements.
The UK applies a range of anti-avoidance measures to counteract tax planning that erodes the UK tax base. Key rules include:
UK resident groups must include in their UK tax base certain profits of controlled foreign subsidiaries where profits are artificially diverted. Main features are:
Any UK entity transacting with associated enterprises on cross-border or UK inland dealings must:
The UK has an extensive network of double tax treaties that:
The personal income tax rates in the United Kingdom are:
Most UK residents benefit from a personal tax-free allowance and a range of specific reliefs that mean not all income is taxed. In addition, certain groups and types of income are entirely exempt from income tax.
The tax period runs from 6th April to 5th April each tax year.
Every individual resident in the UK is entitled to the personal allowance, which is the amount of income they can receive each tax year without paying income tax. The full allowance applies to most people; it reduces for those whose adjusted net income exceeds £100,000 and is withdrawn entirely once income reaches £125,140.
Individuals can further reduce taxable income by claiming:
Employees who are required to travel away from their normal workplace for business purposes may be granted a daily allowance to cover meals and incidental costs. The allowance can be paid at HMRC scale rates without the need to account for every receipt, provided the employee is on an authorised overnight or extended business trip.
HMRC benchmark rates for UK travel permit tax-free scale payments of:
Actual costs above these rates may be reimbursed tax-free if supported by receipts and are wholly, exclusively and necessarily incurred.
An individual is treated as a UK resident for a tax year if they meet any of the statutory residence test criteria. Residency is determined by days spent in the UK and by connections (“ties”) to the UK.
Meeting any of the automatic resident conditions or passing the sufficient ties test means the individual is UK tax resident for the year.
VAT in the UK is governed primarily by the Value Added Tax Act 1994, supported by detailed secondary legislation that sets out procedures, thresholds and special rules.
A taxable person is any individual or entity that independently carries on an economic activity and makes taxable supplies, and who is either registered for VAT or legally required to register.
A taxable event is the point at which a supply gives rise to a VAT liability. The main events are the making of a supply of goods or services, intra-UK acquisitions and imports into the UK.
The taxable amount is the value on which VAT is calculated. It is generally the total consideration received (or receivable) for the supply, excluding VAT, subject to certain adjustments.
The standard VAT accounting period in the UK is three months. Most businesses are placed on quarterly periods, each covering a consecutive three-month span. You can agree with HMRC to file and pay monthly or annually instead but quarterly remains the default.
Since 1 January 2021 the UK has left the EU VAT regime. UK businesses no longer file EC Sales Lists. Instead, cross-border sales to EU consumers are reported under the One-Stop Shop or by local EU filings where required. There is no separate EC Sales List submission for UK VAT-registered traders.
The reverse charge shifts the VAT liability from supplier to customer in specific cases. It applies domestically to:
Under a reverse charge, the recipient accounts for output and input VAT in their own return without a net cash payment.
VAT registration becomes mandatory for any person or business whose taxable supplies exceed £90,000 in a rolling 12-month period. You must register within 30 days of the end of the month in which the threshold is passed. Voluntary registration is possible below that threshold.
A taxable person must register as an identified person if they make supplies in the UK but have no established business presence here. Typical examples include non-UK businesses making distance sales of goods or certain services to UK customers. Identified persons account for VAT as if they were registered, even if their turnover is below the normal threshold.
VAT group registration is possible for two or more corporate bodies or companies under common UK ownership. To qualify, each member must be UK-established and at least 75 percent owned by the same parent. A group files a single VAT return and makes only one payment, with supplies between members ignored for VAT purposes.
In addition to Corporation Tax, VAT, and Income Tax, there are several other taxes and charges that apply to UK businesses and individuals. These include property transaction taxes, such as Stamp Duty Land Tax in England and Northern Ireland, which ranges from 0 to 15% of the purchase price with payment due within 14 days of completion. Similar taxes exist in Wales (Land Transaction Tax) and Scotland (Land and Buildings Transaction Tax), both with comparable banded rates and deadlines. Business rates for non-domestic properties and council tax for residential properties are also payable through local instalment plans.
Excise and customs duties are levied on goods and imports. Excise duties, reported monthly, cover items like alcohol, tobacco, and hydrocarbon oils, which are taxed at fixed rates per unit or volume. Customs duties are applied at the point of import and vary depending on the type and origin of goods, generally ranging from 0 to over 20%. These are paid either on declaration or through a deferment account.
There are also various transport-related charges. Vehicle Excise Duty, also known as road tax, is based on the vehicle’s type, age, and carbon dioxide emissions. Air Passenger Duty is charged per passenger and depends on the destination, while non-UK hauliers are subject to the HGV Road User Levy.
Additional levies and employer contributions include environmental and regulatory taxes, such as the Climate Change Levy on business energy usage (charged per kilowatt hour), Landfill Tax (charged per tonne at standard or lower rates), and Insurance Premium Tax (12% standard rate, with some exemptions). Employment-related levies include the Apprenticeship Levy, which is 0.5% of a pay bill over £3 million and reported monthly through PAYE, and Employer’s National Insurance Contributions, currently set at 13.8% for earnings above the secondary threshold and paid alongside PAYE.

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