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Free Tool · 2026/27 HMRC Rates

Partnership vs Limited Company

Compare a partnership against a limited company — total tax, National Insurance and take-home pay after corporation tax and dividends.

Business
£

Profit is assumed split equally between owners.

Company Extraction

Lower this to model leaving profit in the company.

Employment Allowance i Reduces employer NI by up to £10,500/year. Available where there are at least two employees on the payroll.
2026/27 Rates
Income Tax: 20% / 40% / 45%
Class 4 NI: 6% / 2%
Employer NI: 15% above £5,000
Corp Tax: 19% → 25% (marginal relief)
Dividends: 10.75% / 35.75% / 39.35%
Partnership
Limited Company
Limited Company Advantage
Tax Saved by Incorporating
Total tax & NI difference per year
Profit Retained in Company
After corporation tax, not yet extracted
// Take-home vs Tax Burden
Partnership
Take-home
Tax + NI
Limited Company
Take-home
Total tax
Partnership Ltd Co
⚠ Estimates only. Based on 2026/27 HMRC rates, profit split equally and (for the company) extracted as an optimal salary plus dividends. It excludes one-off incorporation costs such as CGT on goodwill and SDLT on property. Not financial advice — speak to an accountant about your own circumstances.
Quick Answer
Is a limited company more tax-efficient than a partnership?

Not automatically. For 2026/27, when all profit is drawn each year, a partnership can leave owners with similar or even higher take-home pay than a limited company — once you account for corporation tax, 15% employer National Insurance and the higher dividend rates (10.75% and 35.75% from April 2026). A limited company usually wins when profit is retained and reinvested rather than fully extracted, because retained profit is taxed only at corporation tax. Enter your figures above to compare.

When a limited company wins vs when a partnership wins

A limited company is usually better when…

  • You do not need all the profit personally
  • You retain and reinvest earnings in the business
  • Profits are pushing partners into higher or additional rate
  • Limited liability protection matters
  • You are planning a future sale or bringing in investors
  • Employer pension contributions form part of the plan

A partnership is usually better when…

  • Every pound of profit is drawn each year
  • Profits are modest and within the basic rate band
  • You want minimal admin and filing
  • You want to avoid one-off incorporation costs
  • Flexibility over profit shares matters more than tax
  • The business holds property where SDLT would bite

How the two structures are taxed in 2026/27

In a partnership, each partner is taxed personally on their share of profit whether or not they draw it — income tax at 20%, 40% or 45%, plus Class 4 National Insurance at 6% and then 2%. There is no separate business-level tax.

A limited company pays corporation tax first — 19% on profits up to £50,000, rising to 25% above £250,000, with marginal relief giving an effective rate of up to 26.5% in between. Directors then pay income tax on salary and dividend tax (10.75%, 35.75% or 39.35%) on dividends above the £500 allowance. Crucially, profit left in the company is taxed only at corporation tax, which is what creates the planning advantage.

Related tools & resources

Frequently asked questions

Is a limited company more tax-efficient than a partnership?
Not automatically. For 2026/27, when profit is fully drawn, a partnership can match or beat a limited company on take-home once corporation tax, 15% employer NI and the higher dividend rates are included. A company wins mainly when profit is retained rather than fully extracted.
How is a partnership taxed compared to a limited company?
Partners pay income tax and Class 4 NI on their profit share whether or not they draw it. A company pays corporation tax first, then directors pay income tax on salary and dividend tax on dividends. Profit kept in the company is taxed only at corporation tax.
When should a partnership become a limited company?
Usually when owners can retain earnings rather than draw everything, when limited liability matters, or when planning a future sale. If all profit is extracted each year, the tax saving is now small or can be negative. Weigh one-off costs such as CGT on goodwill and SDLT on property too.
What taxes does a limited company pay in 2026/27?
Corporation tax at 19% up to £50,000 and 25% above £250,000, with marginal relief (up to 26.5% effective) in between. Directors pay income tax on salary, employee and employer NI on salary above the thresholds, and dividend tax at 10.75%, 35.75% or 39.35% above the £500 allowance.
Does retaining profit in a limited company save tax?
In the year it is earned, yes — retained profit is taxed only at corporation tax, not dividend rates. But it is a deferral: you pay dividend tax when you later draw it, or capital gains tax (with Business Asset Disposal Relief at 18% for 2026/27) if you extract it on winding up. Use the retention layer above to see the net position under each route.

Thinking about incorporating?

Get a personalised view of whether a limited company would actually save you tax — including the one-off costs — from AccTek's qualified UK accountants.

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