Guide · Business

Setting Up a UK Limited Company in 2026: Costs, Tax and a Step-by-Step Guide.

A straight, plain-English breakdown of what incorporating a UK company involves in 2026 — Companies House fees, the new identity verification requirement, corporation tax, the salary and dividend split that has just shifted, and when going limited actually makes sense versus staying as a sole trader. Information, not advice.

The headline figures.

Before getting into the mechanics, three numbers worth anchoring on. They've all changed in the last 18 months, and the changes matter.

£100

Digital incorporation fee at Companies House, from 1 February 2026 — doubled from £50

2.1 million

Actively trading UK companies — 37% of the private sector business population (DBT 2025)

10.75% / 35.75%

New basic/higher rate dividend tax rates from 6 April 2026 — up 2 percentage points

The dividend tax rise in particular has shifted the maths of the limited company structure. The total tax-efficient extraction is still genuinely lower than the sole trader equivalent at most profit levels, but the gap has narrowed. The case for going limited is now driven as much by liability protection, credibility, and avoiding MTD ITSA quarterly reporting as by pure tax savings.

Limited vs sole trader — when to switch.

Most people start as sole traders. Some never need to switch. The question of when to incorporate is a balance of tax savings, admin burden, liability, and a handful of practical considerations that aren't about money at all.

The tax crossover

At low profit levels (below ~£30,000) the tax advantage of a limited company is small and often outweighed by extra accountancy fees. From around £40,000 to £50,000 in annual profit, the corporation tax + dividend extraction structure starts saving meaningfully versus paying full personal income tax and Class 4 NI as a sole trader. Above £60,000 in profit the gap is usually clear. At £100,000+, it can be £8,000 to £15,000+ per year.

Non-tax reasons that often matter more

For a detailed walk-through of the sole trader side of this comparison, see the Going Self-Employed UK 2026 guide.

How to incorporate at Companies House.

Setting up a UK limited company is a formal legal act registered at Companies House. The mechanics are straightforward once you know the sequence.

Step 1: Choose a company name

Check availability at Companies House's free name-check tool on gov.uk. The name must end in "Limited" or "Ltd" (or the Welsh equivalents). Some words are restricted — "Bank", "Royal", "Trust" and others need approval. Avoid names too close to existing companies. Trademark conflicts are checked separately — use the IPO database before committing.

Step 2: Decide on directors, shareholders and PSCs

Every UK company needs at least one director (over 16, not disqualified, not bankrupt) and at least one shareholder. The director and shareholder can be the same person. Persons with Significant Control (PSCs) — typically anyone holding more than 25% of shares or voting rights — must be identified and registered separately.

Step 3: Sort the registered office address

Since March 2024, every UK company must have a physical UK registered office address — a PO Box alone is no longer acceptable. The address is on the public register. Many directors use a paid registered office service (£20-£60/year) to keep their home address off the public record. A registered email address is also required at incorporation.

Step 4: Prepare the Memorandum and Articles of Association

The Memorandum is a one-page declaration of intent. The Articles of Association are the company's internal rulebook — covering how shares are issued, how directors are appointed, what decisions need shareholder approval, and so on. Model articles (the default off-the-shelf version) are appropriate for most small companies and free to use.

Step 5: File with Companies House

Most incorporations are done online through the Companies House WebFiling service or via a formation agent. Current fees from 1 February 2026:

Companies House incorporation fees 2026
ServiceFeeSpeed
Digital incorporation (standard)£100Usually next working day
Digital incorporation (same-day)£156Within 24 hours if filed before 3pm
Paper incorporation£1248 to 10 working days

Once accepted, Companies House issues a Certificate of Incorporation. You're a limited company. HMRC is automatically notified.

Step 6: Post-incorporation tasks

Identity verification — the new requirement.

This is the biggest procedural change to UK incorporation in decades, and a lot of people are still unaware of it.

From 18 November 2025, identity verification became compulsory for all new directors, PSCs and certain filers under the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023. Existing directors and PSCs have until 18 November 2026 to complete verification.

How to verify

Two routes:

Without verification, you cannot be appointed as a director and the company cannot file its confirmation statement. Companies that miss the November 2026 deadline for existing officeholders will be in breach of statutory duties. This is not a soft launch — the new powers under ECCTA give Companies House the ability to reject filings, query information, and remove directors from the register.

Corporation tax in 2026/27.

Companies pay tax on their profit at one of two main rates — with a marginal relief calculation in between.

Corporation tax rates 2026/27
Profit bandRate
£0 – £50,00019% (small profits rate)
£50,001 – £250,000Marginal relief (rising effective rate)
Over £250,00025% (main rate)

Inside the marginal relief band, the effective rate climbs smoothly from 19% to 25%, peaking at 26.5% on the slice of profit between £50,000 and £250,000 (the marginal rate is higher than 25% to make the average work out). This makes the £50,000 threshold an unusually important planning line — keeping profits just under it saves disproportionately.

Associated companies: If you control more than one company (or several companies are controlled by the same people), the £50,000 and £250,000 thresholds are divided by the number of associated companies. Two companies under common control means each company has its own thresholds of £25,000 and £125,000.

When and how corporation tax is paid

Corporation tax is paid 9 months and 1 day after the company year-end. So a company with a 31 March year-end pays its corporation tax by the following 1 January. The CT600 corporation tax return is filed with HMRC within 12 months of the year-end. Annual statutory accounts must be filed at Companies House within 9 months of the year-end (the deadlines diverge slightly — corporation tax is paid before the accounts are formally filed).

Paying yourself — the salary and dividend split.

This is the part of running a limited company that gets most attention. Directors generally take a mix of salary (subject to PAYE income tax and National Insurance, but deductible against corporation tax) and dividends (paid from post-corporation-tax profits, taxed at lower dividend rates with no NI). The skill is balancing the two each year.

2026/27 dividend tax rates

Dividend rates increased by 2 percentage points from 6 April 2026, the first major dividend tax rise since 2022:

Dividend tax rates 2026/27
Dividend within2025/262026/27
Dividend allowance (first £500)0%0%
Basic rate band8.75%10.75%
Higher rate band33.75%35.75%
Additional rate band39.35%39.35%

The three common salary levels for directors

Most sole-director companies pick one of three salary strategies:

Worked example — £80,000 company profit, sole director

A common case: a freelancer or contractor company generating £80,000 in profit before salary, with the sole director extracting income to live on.

Sole director, £80,000 company profit, 2026/27
Amount
Director salary£12,570
Employer NI on salary£1,136
Company profit after salary & NI£66,294
Corporation tax (effective ~22%)£14,584
Distributable profit (max dividends)£51,710
Personal dividend allowance£500
Dividend in basic rate band (taxed 10.75%)£37,200
Dividend in higher rate band (taxed 35.75%)£14,010
Personal dividend tax£8,997
Total take-home (salary + net dividends)£55,283

Compare to a sole trader generating the same £80,000 profit: total income tax + Class 4 NI of approximately £22,186, leaving £57,814 take-home. So at £80,000 profit, the gap has narrowed substantially since the dividend tax rises. The case for a limited company is no longer primarily about saving income tax — it's about liability, credibility, profit retention, and MTD avoidance.

Other ways to extract value

Ongoing filings and deadlines.

Running a limited company creates a recurring set of statutory filings. None of them are hard individually; the cost of forgetting them is what catches people out.

Annual filings

Periodic filings

Director's self assessment

Most directors of small limited companies are also required to file personal Self Assessment returns to declare dividend income, salary above basic levels, and any other income. The deadline is 31 January following the tax year, in line with the standard sole trader timeline.

IR35 for contractors.

If your limited company will be providing services to a single client (or a small number of clients) on an extended basis — the classic IT contractor, consultant, or interim manager model — IR35 is essential to understand before incorporating.

IR35 (formally the "off-payroll working rules") is the test of whether a contractor working through a Personal Service Company (PSC) is genuinely running a business or is, in substance, an employee of the client. Inside-IR35 contracts are taxed broadly like employment income, removing most of the tax advantage of the limited company structure.

The status tests

HMRC looks at the actual working arrangement, not just the contract wording. The main factors:

Who decides

Since April 2021, medium and large clients are responsible for determining IR35 status of contractors they engage. Small clients (companies with under £10.2m turnover, under £5.1m balance sheet, fewer than 50 employees) leave the responsibility with the contractor's own company. The status determination must be communicated to the contractor in writing.

For contractors, IR35 is the single biggest reason to be cautious about the limited company route. Outside-IR35 contracts make a limited company worthwhile; inside-IR35 contracts often make an umbrella company or PAYE arrangement simpler.

The most common mistakes.

Patterns repeat across new directors. The expensive mistakes are nearly always avoidable:

Frequently asked questions.

Can I run a limited company from home?

Yes, very common. You'll need a UK registered office address — which can be your home, though many directors use a registered office service to keep their home address off the public record (£20-£60/year typically). Check your home insurance and mortgage terms — running a business from home occasionally affects either. If clients will visit, you may need to consider planning permission and business rates implications, though for service-based home-working these are rarely an issue.

How long does it take to incorporate?

Standard digital incorporation through Companies House is typically processed within one working day. Same-day service is available for an additional fee (£156 vs £100) if filed by 3pm. Paper incorporation takes 8 to 10 working days. Most online formation agents (1st Formations, Rapid Formations, Companies Made Simple) can complete the full setup including registered office and articles in a few hours.

Can I transfer my sole trader business to a limited company?

Yes — and it's a common move. The mechanics involve incorporating the new company, transferring trade and assets from the sole trader to the company, and notifying HMRC, clients and suppliers of the change. Capital Gains Tax incorporation relief is available to defer any tax on the disposal of business assets to the new company. The process needs to be done properly to maintain VAT registration continuity and avoid triggering unintended tax charges — most people use an accountant for the incorporation process specifically.

Do I need to pay myself anything?

No — there's no legal minimum salary for company directors. You can leave all profit inside the company and pay yourself nothing if you choose. Many start-up founders do this in the first year while the company is building cash reserves. The trade-off is that without earning at least £6,708 in qualifying NI, you don't earn a State Pension qualifying year — though one missed year out of the 35 required is usually not significant.

What happens if my company makes a loss?

Trading losses can be carried forward indefinitely to offset against future company profits, carried back one year against the previous year's profits (sometimes longer in specific circumstances), or surrendered as group relief if the company is part of a larger group. Losses cannot be transferred to you personally to offset against your other income — this is a key difference from sole trading.

Can I close a limited company easily?

Yes, and it's actually cheaper from February 2026. Voluntary strike-off via DS01 form costs £13 digital (down from £33). The company must have stopped trading at least 3 months earlier, have no outstanding creditors, and have settled all tax obligations. For companies with significant assets to distribute, a Members' Voluntary Liquidation (MVL) can be more tax-efficient as distributions are taxed at Capital Gains rates rather than dividend rates, often with Business Asset Disposal Relief reducing the rate to 14% (rising to 18% from April 2026).

What's the difference between a director and a shareholder?

A director runs the company — making operational decisions, signing contracts, ensuring statutory compliance. A shareholder owns the company — entitled to a share of profits via dividends and to vote on major decisions. In small companies the same person is usually both. In larger companies the roles diverge. Directors have specific legal duties under the Companies Act 2006; shareholders generally do not.

Everything you need, in one designed ebook.

The Northhaus Incorporated guide is a 25-page designed ebook covering UK limited company setup end-to-end — Companies House registration, identity verification, corporation tax, the salary/dividend split, IR35, and the post-incorporation calendar. Figures verified against 2026/27 UK tax data. Single PDF download, yours to keep.

View the Incorporated ebook — £1.99

Sources

  • Companies House — Fee schedule from 1 February 2026 (gov.uk)
  • Companies House — Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 implementation
  • HM Revenue & Customs — Corporation Tax rates and reliefs 2026/27
  • HM Revenue & Customs — Tax on dividends 2026/27
  • HM Revenue & Customs — Off-payroll working rules (IR35)
  • Department for Business and Trade — Business Population Estimates 2025 (October 2025)
  • Federation of Small Businesses — Director salary and dividends 2026/27
  • HMRC — Employment Allowance guidance (£10,500 allowance, sole-director exclusion)

Figures cited reflect publicly reported data as of June 2026. UK tax rates and Companies House fees for the 2026/27 tax year. This guide provides general information for educational purposes only and is not tax or legal advice. The salary/dividend split is a significant tax planning decision — always verify current rates at gov.uk and consider professional advice from a qualified accountant for your specific situation.