TITLE: UK Corporation Tax Changes April 2026: What You Need to Know
The Three-Tier Rate Structure: Where Do You Sit?
The fundamental structure of UK Corporation Tax remains a tiered system, but the way you qualify for these tiers is becoming much stricter. Since the 2023 overhaul, we have moved away from a flat rate to a system that rewards smaller profits while placing a higher burden on larger earners.
Here is the breakdown for the 2026/27 financial year:
- Small Profits Rate (19%): This applies to companies with augmented profits of £50,000 or less.
- Main Rate (25%): This applies to companies with augmented profits exceeding £250,000.
- Marginal Relief: If your profits fall between £50,001 and £250,000, you don’t pay the full 25% immediately. Instead, your tax rate gradually increases from 19% to 25% through a calculation known as Marginal Relief.
Why this matters for you: If you are an e-commerce seller or a fast-growing SME, hitting that £50k mark happens faster than you think. Staying under the 19% threshold requires careful monitoring of your year-end accounts.
The “Associated Company” Trap: The Biggest Change for 2026
The most critical update for April 2026 involves how HMRC views “Associated Companies.” Previously, many business owners could split their operations across multiple Limited Companies to keep each one under the £50,000 threshold, thereby enjoying the 19% rate across the board.
HMRC has closed this loophole.
From April 2026, the thresholds (£50,000 and £250,000) are divided by the number of associated companies you have under common control.
The Math of Multi-Company Ownership
If you own three separate companies:
- Your lower threshold drops from £50,000 to £16,666.
- Your upper threshold drops from £250,000 to £83,333.
If one of those companies makes £40,000 in profit, it would have previously been taxed at 19%. Under the 2026 rules, because the threshold is now £16,666, that company will be pushed into the Marginal Relief bracket or even the 25% Main Rate bracket.
This change is particularly relevant for international directors who might have multiple UK entities. If you are navigating this, you may want to check our guide on how tax works for a foreign director.
Capital Allowances: The 18% to 14% Reduction
For businesses that invest heavily in machinery, tech infrastructure, or warehouse equipment, there is a significant shift in “Main Pool” writing-down allowances.
Starting April 2026, the allowance drops from 18% to 14%.
This represents a 22% reduction in the annual relief you can claim on plant and machinery. If you’ve been planning a major equipment upgrade or a tech overhaul for your e-commerce operations, doing it before April 2026 could secure you that higher 18% rate, providing immediate tax relief.
Quarterly Instalment Payments (QIPs) Expansion
Think your business isn’t “big enough” for quarterly tax payments? Think again. HMRC is expanding the scope of who must pay Corporation Tax in instalments.
The threshold for QIPs is typically £1.5 million in profit. However, much like the tiered rates mentioned above, this threshold is now divided by the number of associated companies.
If you have five associated companies, the threshold for quarterly payments drops to just £300,000 per company. If you miss these deadlines because you weren’t aware you triggered the threshold, you risk interest charges and penalties.
Specific Impact on E-Commerce and Digital Brands
E-commerce businesses often operate with lean margins but high turnover. These new Corporation Tax rules mean that your “profit” needs to be managed more precisely than ever.
- Inventory Management: Since capital allowances are dropping, the timing of your warehouse equipment purchases is vital.
- Scaling and Structure: If you are running multiple brands under different companies to “test the waters,” you are inadvertently lowering your tax thresholds for all of them.
- Global Expansion: If you are a UK entity with associated companies in the EU or USA, HMRC’s reach on associated company rules can still apply if they are under common control.
For those scaling on platforms like Amazon, integrated accounting is no longer a luxury, it’s a compliance necessity.
Action Plan: What You Should Do Before April 2026
To avoid a surprise tax bill, follow this checklist:
- Audit Your Corporate Structure: Identify every company under your “control.” This includes companies where you or your close family members hold a majority stake.
- Recalculate Your Thresholds: Don’t assume the £50,000 limit applies to you. Divide it by your total number of associated companies to find your “True 19%” limit.
- Accelerate Capital Spending: If you need new laptops, servers, or machinery, buy them before the April 2026 deadline to claim the 18% allowance instead of 14%.
- Review Quarterly Obligations: Check if your combined group profits now push your individual entities into the Quarterly Instalment Payment regime.
How Sterlinx Global Supports Your Compliance
At Sterlinx Global, we don’t just “advise”, we execute. We understand that as a business owner, you don’t want to spend your weekends calculating marginal relief fractions.
Our team provides a full-suite compliance service for UK Limited Companies. We handle the bookkeeping, the year-end accounts, and the complex Corporation Tax filings. Our goal is to ensure you never pay a penny more than you legally owe, while ensuring you stay 100% compliant with HMRC’s evolving rules.
If you’re feeling overwhelmed by the associated company rules or the drop in capital allowances, it might be time to talk to a tax adviser or accountant.
FAQ: UK Corporation Tax Changes 2026
What is the new Corporation Tax rate for 2026?
The rates remain 19% for profits under £50,000 and 25% for profits over £250,000. However, these thresholds are now split between “associated companies,” meaning many businesses will pay the higher rate sooner.
What counts as an “Associated Company” in 2026?
An associated company is generally any company that is under the same “control” as another. This includes companies controlled by the same person or group of persons, even if they operate in completely different industries.
How does the Capital Allowance change affect my business?
The writing-down allowance for the main pool (general plant and machinery) is dropping from 18% to 14%. This means you get less tax relief on your purchases each year.
When should I start paying tax in quarterly instalments?
You must pay in instalments if your company’s profit exceeds £1.5 million (or the threshold divided by the number of associated companies you control). Check your specific threshold by dividing this figure by your associated company count.





