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Ltd Co · Associated Companies · 2026/27

UK Associated Companies and Corporation Tax (2026/27)

When two or more UK companies are "associated" — broadly, under common control — they must share the £50,000 small-profits limit and the £250,000 marginal-relief upper limit between them. The limits are divided by the number of associated companies. This page covers what counts as control, how the limits divide, the planning options, and the most-missed scenarios where association applies.

5-minute read

Associated companies in one paragraph: if you control two or more UK companies (or are connected to people who do), the £50,000 small-profits limit and £250,000 marginal-relief upper limit are divided between them. Two associated companies each have a £25,000 SP limit and £125,000 marginal-relief upper limit. This can mean profits taxed at the marginal 26.5% rate when each company alone would have been at 19%. The April 2023 reforms greatly expanded the practical relevance of association.

Why association matters now (post-April 2023)

Pre-April 2023, corporation tax was a flat 19% — association barely mattered. Since April 2023, the bands are:

With two associated companies, each gets only £25,000 small-profits limit and £125,000 upper limit. So a company with profits of £40,000 would jump from 19% (single company) to 26.5% marginal rate (one of two associated). That's a £3,000+ annual difference.

What counts as "associated"?

Two companies are associated for CT purposes if one is under the control of the other, or both are under the control of the same person or persons. Control means:

"Connected persons" can be aggregated for control purposes: spouse/civil partner, child, parent, sibling, business partners. If you and your spouse each own 50% of two different companies, those companies are associated.

What does NOT cause association

The "common scenarios" that catch directors

1. Spouse-controlled companies

You own 100% of TradingCo. Your spouse owns 100% of SeparateCo. Because spouses are connected persons, the two companies are associated. Each gets half the CT limits.

2. Property and trading companies under same owner

You own 100% of TradingCo (a consultancy) and 100% of PropertyCo (residential BTL). Both are associated. Property profits taxed at potentially marginal-rate even though small.

3. Group with multiple subsidiaries

HoldCo owns 100% of three trading subs (A, B, C). Four associated companies. Each gets one-quarter of the CT limits. A subsidiary with £40,000 profit is now in marginal-relief territory rather than at small-profits rate.

4. Joint ventures

You own 60% of CompanyA and 60% of CompanyB. You control both. Both are associated. The 40% minority shareholders are irrelevant.

5. Family companies

Mum owns CompanyMum. Adult child owns CompanyChild. They are not associated unless one has rights over the other's company (e.g., loans, options). Adult children are NOT connected persons for CT association purposes (unlike for IHT and certain other taxes).

Worked example: two companies, mid-range profit

You own 100% of TradingCo (profit £80,000) and 100% of PropertyCo (profit £30,000). Both companies share CT limits.

Each company's adjusted limits:

TradingCo CT:

PropertyCo CT:

If the two companies hadn't been associated:

Cost of being associated: £5,550 extra CT (£19,325 + £6,075 vs £14,150 + £5,700).

Planning around association

Tax pool / extended accounting periods

Two further wrinkles:

Common association mistakes

Sources

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