As the owner of a limited company in the United Kingdom, you’re entitled to claim corporation tax relief to reduce the amount of tax you pay to the government. Businesses of all sizes can file for tax relief as part of their annual filing process.
We’re breaking down everything you need to know about corporation tax relief, including:
We’ll help you understand the power of tax relief and determine which type is right for your limited company when it’s time to pay tax.
If you run a limited company, you’re legally obliged to pay corporation tax on the annual profits your company makes. This applies to your:
Foreign companies with a UK office, clubs, cooperatives, and other unincorporated associations also pay corporation tax.
You pay tax at a rate of 19% if your profit is below £50,000 and 25% if your profit is over £250,000. To work out your taxable profit, you’ll need to complete a company tax return (CT600) no later than 12 months after the end of your accounting period.
Corporation tax reliefs and allowances can help you reduce your corporation tax bill. So it’s worth understanding what these are and how they work, so you can apply the right types of relief to your business.
You can deduct the costs of running your business from your profits before tax when you prepare your company’s accounts. However, anything you or employees get personal use from counts as a benefit.
And some expenses aren’t allowed for corporation tax, such as entertaining your clients. You should add these costs back to your profits when preparing your company tax return and getting your corporation tax paid.
You can claim capital allowances when buying assets you keep and use for business purposes, such as:
These are also known as plant and machinery.
R&D relief is for businesses that work on innovative projects in science and technology. If your company seeks to research or develop an advance in your field, you may be able to claim this relief. Even if you’re unsuccessful, you can still claim it.
You’ll need to show how:
You may be developing a new process, product, or service or improving an existing one.
The Patent Box is designed to help businesses keep and commercialise their intellectual property in the UK. Using it, you can apply a lower rate of corporation tax to the profits you earn from patented inventions.
You must elect into the Patent Box to apply the lower UK corporation tax rate, which is 10%.
You can use the Patent Box if your business:
If you elected to the Patent Box after 30 June 2016, benefits are restricted if you:
This is a group of 8 tax reliefs that allow businesses to increase their allowable expenditure. If your company makes a loss, you may be able to surrender this and convert it into a payable tax credit.
The 8 reliefs are:
You can claim creative industries tax relief if your business operates in any of these 8 areas. You also need to be responsible for decision-making and paying for rights, goods, and services.
Your company must have responsibility throughout the development of the product, from pre-production until completion. And for theatrical productions, orchestral concerts, and exhibitions, your business must be responsible for producing, running, and closing the production.
You can claim relief on purchases made after 1 April 2019 if:
There’s a lower fixed rate of relief at 6.5% per year on the lower cost of assets or 6 times the costs of your qualifying IP assets in the business you bought. You can get yearly relief until you reach the limit.
There are restrictions for goodwill and assets purchased:
You can find more information in the Corporate Intangibles Research Manual from CIRD44000 onwards.
With disincorporation relief, you can transfer certain assets to your company’s shareholders who are continuing to run the business in an unincorporated form. Your business won’t incur corporation tax when you dispose of the assets.
You and your shareholders can claim for disincorporation relief if the:
Your business transfer date is usually the date when the business is transferred. However, this date can be different if the business is transferred under contract.
You can transfer the business to individuals who are in a partnership but not in a limited liability partnership. They must keep running the business after the transfer.
If your business makes a loss from:
You may be able to claim corporation tax relief by offsetting the loss against your other profits or gains in the same accounting period. You can also carry the loss back or carry it forward to another period.
Terminal Losses
You may be able to claim terminal loss relief if your business stops trading. You can carry back trading losses in your company’s final 12 months of trade and set them off against the profit you make in the 3 years up to the period when you made the loss.
Capital Losses
You may make a loss when selling or disposing of a capital asset. Unlike trading losses, these losses can’t be set off against trading income. They’re set off automatically.
Property Income Losses
Losses from property income:
If your business is a member of a group, you can offset losses on property income against the profits of other group members if they’re from the same period. But only if they’re more than your company’s profits for the period.
Marginal relief offers a gradual increase in the U.K. corporation tax rate between small profits and the main rate. It applies when your business’s profits for an accounting period go over a lower limit but not an upper limit.
You can claim marginal relief if your company’s profits were £50,000–£250,000 from 1 April 2023.
A range of support measures were made available to U.K. businesses during the COVID-19 pandemic. Most of these measures have now closed:
Corporation tax reliefs can be difficult to keep track of, but they’re worth looking into. The right relief may help you to make substantial savings on your tax bill. If you’re not sure where to start with relief, the expertise of an accountant or tax adviser may well be worth investing in when it’s time to pay corporation tax.
This post was updated in January 2024.