skip to navigationskip to main content

Tax Rates & Allowances

Back to Tax Rates & Allowances

Corporation Tax

Rates

The rates for the three financial years from 1 April  2021 are as follows:

Year beginning 1 April: 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
Corporate Tax main rate  19% 19% 25% 25% 25%
Corporate Tax small profits rate N/A N/A 19% 19% 19%
Marginal relief lower profit limit N/A N/A £50,000 £50,000 £50,000
Marginal relief upper profit limit N/A N/A £250,000 £250,000 £250,000
Standard fraction N/A N/A 3/200 3/200 3/200
Main rate (all profits except ring fence profits) 19% 19% N/A N/A N/A

From 1 April 2023, the Corporation Tax main rate applies to profits over £250,000, and the small profits rate applies to profits of up to £50,000. Those thresholds are divided by the number of associated companies carrying on a trade or business for all or part of the accounting period.   Companies with profits between £50,000 and £250,000 pay tax at the main rate reduced by a marginal relief determined by the standard fraction and this formula:

formula

Where:

F = standard fraction

U = upper limit

A = amount of the augmented profits

N =amount of the taxable total profits 

For companies with ring fence profits from oil or gas related activities, the main rate is 30%, and the small profits rate is 19%, with a ring fence fraction of 11/400, for all financial years from 2008.

Research and Development (R&D)

R&D merged scheme and enhanced intensive support (periods starting on or after 1 April 2024)

The merged scheme R&D expenditure credit (RDEC) and enhanced R&D intensive support (ERIS) replace the old RDEC and small and medium-sized enterprise (SME) schemes for accounting periods beginning on or after 1 April 2024. The expenditure rules for both are the same, but the calculation is different.
You can choose to claim under the merged scheme even if you are eligible for ERIS, but you cannot claim under both schemes for the same expenditure.

The merged scheme is a taxable expenditure credit and can be claimed by trading companies that are chargeable to Corporation Tax and have a project that meets the definition of R&D.

For expenditure under the merged scheme, the rate of R&D expenditure credit is 20%.

Enhanced intensive support (ERIS) allows loss-making R&D intensive SMEs to deduct an extra 86% of their qualifying costs in calculating their adjusted trading loss, as well as the 100% deduction which already appears in the accounts (or in the computations) to make a total of 186% deduction as well as claim a payable tax credit, which is not liable to tax and is worth up to 14.5% of the surrenderable loss.

SME scheme (periods starting before 1 April 2024)

Small and medium (SME) companies can claim enhanced deductions for expenditure on R&D projects at 186% (230% before April 2023) of qualifying expenditure. Where the deduction is claimed and the company makes a loss, it can claim a cash credit from HMRC of 10% of that loss from 1 April 2023, previously 14.5%. Where the SME spends at least 40% of their total expenditure on qualifying R&D from 1 April 2023, it can claim the higher payable tax credit of 14.5%.

Each R&D project must be carried on in a field of science or technology and be undertaken with an aim of extending knowledge in a field of science or technology.

Research and Development Expenditure Credit (RDEC) scheme (periods starting before 1 April 2024)

Large companies can claim an extra 20% deduction from 1 April 2023 on the following qualifying expenditure:

  • Staffing costs
  • Expenditure on externally provided workers
  • Software and materials consumed or transformed
  • Utilities but not rent
  • Payments to clinical volunteers
  • Subcontractors of qualifying bodies and individuals/partnerships

For staff working directly on the R&D project, you can claim for the following costs, as long as they relate to R&D:

  • Bonuses
  • Salaries
  • Wages
  • Pension fund contributions
  • Secondary Class 1 National Insurance contributions paid by the company

RDEC differs from the previous R&D scheme for large companies as it is an 'above the line' tax credit and can be accounted for in the profit/loss statement.