Self-Employment

Limited Company Guide UK — How to Set Up and Run a Limited Company

Everything you need to know about setting up a UK limited company. Formation, directors' duties, tax, dividends, Companies House, and the advantages over sole trading.

Setting up a limited company is one of the most important decisions for UK business owners and self-employed professionals. It offers tax efficiency, limited liability, and professional credibility — but comes with additional responsibilities.

Types of Limited Company

TypeDescriptionBest For
Private limited by shares (Ltd)Most common; shareholders own the companyMost businesses and freelancers
Private limited by guaranteeMembers guarantee a set amountNon-profits, clubs, community organisations
Public limited company (PLC)Can sell shares to the publicLarge companies (not usually relevant here)
LLP (Limited Liability Partnership)Partnership with limited liabilityPartnerships (e.g., two or more professionals)

Setting Up

Steps to Register

StepActionCost
1Choose a company nameFree
2Register with Companies House£12 online / £50 post
3Appoint directors (minimum 1)Free
4Issue sharesFree
5Registered office addressFree (can be your home)
6Memorandum and Articles of AssociationStandard template is free
7Register for Corporation Tax (within 3 months of trading)Free
8Open a business bank accountFree–£10/month
9Register for VAT (if turnover will exceed £90,000)Free

What You Need

RequirementDetail
Company nameMust be unique (check Companies House register)
Registered officeUK address for official correspondence
DirectorAt least one (must be aged 16+)
Person with Significant Control (PSC)Anyone controlling 25%+ of shares or voting rights
SIC codeStandard Industrial Classification code for your business activity
Share structureAt least 1 share (typically 100 ordinary shares at £1 each)

Director’s Responsibilities

DutyDetail
File annual accountsWithin 9 months of year end
File confirmation statementAt least annually (£13)
File Corporation Tax returnWithin 12 months of year end
Pay Corporation TaxWithin 9 months and 1 day of year end
Maintain statutory registersMembers, directors, PSCs
Keep accounting records6 years minimum
Act in company’s best interestsFiduciary duty

Tax Structure

TaxRate (2025/26)When It Applies
Corporation Tax25% (19% for profits under £50,000)On company profits
Marginal reliefEffective rate 19–25%Profits £50,000–£250,000
Dividend tax0% (£500 allowance), then 8.75%/33.75%/39.35%When you take dividends
Income tax on salaryStandard PAYE ratesOn any salary drawn
Employer’s NI15% above £5,000 thresholdOn salary above threshold
VAT20% (standard)If VAT registered

Optimal Salary and Dividend Strategy

ComponentAmount (Typical 2025/26)Why
Salary£12,570 (Personal Allowance)Tax-free, but NI applies above £5,000
OR Salary£5,000 (NI threshold)Minimises Employer’s NI
DividendsRemaining profit after Corporation TaxLower tax rates than salary

Tax Comparison: Sole Trader vs Limited Company

Profit LevelSole Trader Tax + NILtd Company Tax (salary + dividends)Saving
£30,000~£5,800~£4,500~£1,300
£50,000~£12,000~£9,500~£2,500
£75,000~£20,500~£16,000~£4,500
£100,000~£29,500~£24,000~£5,500

Approximate figures — actual savings depend on individual circumstances.

Advantages and Disadvantages

AdvantagesDisadvantages
Limited liability protectionMore admin and compliance
Tax-efficient (salary + dividends)Filing requirements (accounts, CT return)
Professional credibilityAccounts are public record
Can retain profits in the companyNeed an accountant (practically)
Easier to bring in investors/partnersDirectors’ legal responsibilities
Pension contributions are tax-deductible business expenseIR35 rules for contractors

Running Costs

CostTypical Amount
Companies House confirmation statement£13/year
Accountant£500–£2,000/year
Business bank account£0–£15/month
Accounting software£10–£35/month
Professional indemnity insurance£100–£500/year
Registered office (if using a service)£50–£200/year

Key Dates

DeadlineWhat
3 months after trading startsRegister for Corporation Tax
9 months after year endFile annual accounts with Companies House
12 months after year endFile Corporation Tax return with HMRC
9 months + 1 day after year endPay Corporation Tax
Within 14 days of quarter endPay PAYE/NI (if payroll)
AnnuallyFile confirmation statement

For more on registering as self-employed, the sole trader alternative, or IR35 rules, see our dedicated guides.