What is Corporation Tax in the UK?
Corporation Tax is a tax on the taxable profits of UK limited companies, clubs, co-operatives, and other associations. Unlike sole traders who pay personal Income Tax on their business profit through Self Assessment, companies file a Company Tax Return (CT600) with HMRC and pay Corporation Tax on their taxable business profits.
Limited companies are distinct legal entities. Profits generated belong to the company, and they are taxed at corporate rates before any money is distributed to directors or shareholders.
What is the 2026/27 Corporation Tax Rate?
The UK has a tiered corporate tax system to protect smaller businesses. For the 2026/27 tax year, the rates depend on your company's net profits:
| Profit Level | Tax Rate | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Up to £50,000 | 19% | Small Profits Rate applies to companies with smaller profit margins. |
| £50,001 to £250,000 | Marginal Rate | A sliding scale of Marginal Relief applies to smoothly transition the rate. |
| Over £250,000 | 25% | Main Rate applies to all corporate profits above this threshold. |
What is Marginal Relief and How Does It Benefit Your Company?
Marginal Relief prevents companies from jumping abruptly from 19% to 25% when profits cross the £50,000 threshold. For profits between £50,001 and £250,000, the formula is:
In practice, this ensures your tax rate rises progressively on every pound of profit you make in this range. The relief reduces the corporation tax burden for mid-sized operations.
Note on Associated Companies: If you own multiple companies or control them together, the £50,000 and £250,000 limits must be divided equally among them. For example, if you own three limited companies, each company's lower threshold becomes £16,667, and the upper limit becomes £83,333.
How to Minimise Your Company's Corporation Tax
Tax is only paid on the net profit remaining after all business overheads. Therefore, claiming all allowable corporate expenses is vital:
- Director Salaries & Pensions: Pay yourself a director salary and make employer pension contributions to reduce company profits before corporate tax calculation.
- Asset Purchases: Write off capital assets under the Annual Investment Allowance (AIA) or Full Expensing rules.
- Office costs: Deduct computing hardware, telephone lines, software licenses, travel expenses, and office rents.