CIC in one paragraph: a small UK company classified as a Close Investment-Holding Company under s34 CTA 2010 pays the 25% main corporation tax rate on every pound of profit. Trading companies get a 19% small-profits rate up to £50,000 and marginal relief up to £250,000 — CICs don't. The status applies if more than half of your company's activities consist of holding investments rather than trading. Property investment, share holding, and money on deposit can all push you into CIC territory.
When does CIC status apply?
A company is a CIC if:
- It is a close company (which most director-shareholder companies are — broadly, controlled by 5 or fewer people).
- It does NOT exist "wholly or mainly for one of more of the qualifying purposes" listed in s34 CTA 2010.
Qualifying purposes that save you from CIC status:
- Trading on a commercial basis
- Coordinated investment in land for letting commercially (commercial letting business)
- Holding shares in subsidiaries which themselves carry on qualifying activities
- Estate management of land
- Making investments other than as a CIC — this is circular, but in practice means the company holds investments for trading purposes (e.g., a market-maker)
If your activities don't fit any qualifying purpose, you're a CIC.
The financial impact: 25% vs 19% + marginal relief
| Annual profit | Trading company CT | CIC CT | CIC cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| £25,000 | £4,750 (19%) | £6,250 (25%) | +£1,500 |
| £50,000 | £9,500 (19%) | £12,500 (25%) | +£3,000 |
| £100,000 | £22,750 (avg 22.75%) | £25,000 (25%) | +£2,250 |
| £200,000 | £48,250 (avg 24.13%) | £50,000 (25%) | +£1,750 |
| £250,000+ | £62,500 (25%) | £62,500 (25%) | £0 |
Maximum penalty is at profits up to £50,000 (£3,000/year) and tapers towards zero as profits hit £250,000. For a small company doing pure investment work, that £3,000/year compounds over the life of the company.
Common CIC scenarios
1. Personal investment company (PIC)
You've sold a business, retain £500,000 in your trading Ltd, and the Ltd's only ongoing activity is holding investments (equity portfolio, bond funds, etc.). The trading business is gone. The company becomes a CIC the day trading stops — from then on, 25% CT on all profits.
2. Family investment company (FIC)
A purpose-built holding company set up to manage family wealth across generations. By design these are usually CICs — the 25% CT is the cost of the long-term inheritance / wealth-planning structure.
3. Trading company with excess cash investing aggressively
Your trading company has built up £400,000 of cash. You invest it in equities and dividend funds, generating £20,000/year of investment income against £150,000 trading profit. So long as trading is > 50% of activity, you remain trading. Cross that line and you become CIC retrospectively.
4. Property letting company
Important: pure residential property letting is NOT automatically a qualifying activity, but commercial property letting on a continuing basis usually is. Single-property residential BTL via a Ltd is risky; commercial property managed actively is usually safe.
The "wholly or mainly" test
HMRC interprets "mainly" as more than 50% — though without a single bright-line test. Indicators they use:
- Income split between trading and investment
- Asset values dedicated to each
- Time spent by directors on each
- Number of transactions
A company that's borderline (50/50 or close) is in HMRC's discretion zone. Be ready to evidence the trading half.
Avoiding CIC status
- Keep a meaningful trading activity going. Even if the bulk of the business is investment, having >50% trading by some clear measure keeps you out of CIC.
- Wind up the company on cessation rather than hold investments. If the trade is gone and you can't replace it, an MVL (Members' Voluntary Liquidation) returns funds to shareholders as capital, often with Business Asset Disposal Relief at 14% from April 2026 (rising from 10%). See our strike-off vs MVL page.
- Move investments to a separate vehicle. A holding company can have a trading subsidiary, with investments held separately at HoldCo level. The HoldCo holding shares in trading subs qualifies for non-CIC status.
- Use commercial property letting structures correctly. Buy-to-let through a Ltd may still be CIC; commercial property management is safer.
Worked example: planning around CIC
Mr X sold his trading business for £600,000 in 2024. He retained the company shell with the cash, intending to invest until retirement in 2029. Annual investment return: 6% = £36,000 of dividends and interest.
Option A: Keep as CIC.
- CT 25% × £36,000 = £9,000/year
- 5 years × £9,000 = £45,000 total CT
- Plus 40% higher-rate dividend tax when extracting
Option B: MVL the company in 2024, take capital distribution under BADR.
- BADR at 14% on £600,000 (post-April 2026 rate; 10% if liquidated pre-April 2025): £84,000 (or £60,000 if executed before the rate change)
- Reinvest £540,000 personally; future returns taxed at personal rate (0%/8.75%/33.75%/39.35% on dividends; 0/18%/24% on gains)
- With £20,000 ISA allowance plus £3,000 CGT exemption plus £500 dividend allowance, much of the return shelters
Option B saves potentially £20,000-£40,000 over 5 years vs running as CIC, plus removes complexity.
Common CIC mistakes
- Letting a trading company drift into CIC by accident. Cessation of trade with retained cash is the classic. CIC status applies from the day trading stops.
- Treating residential BTL Ltd as trading. Often it's not — depends on activity level and management.
- Forgetting that the small-profits rate is gone. Many directors haven't updated their mental model from when CT was a flat 19%.
- Holding investments in a trading company instead of personally. If you'd be better off personally with ISA/pension wrappers, the CIC structure adds cost.
- Mixing investment and trading. A muddled structure can mean both CIC penalties and missed reliefs (e.g., entrepreneurs' relief failing on disposal).
Sources
Related content for Ltd company directors
- Salary vs dividend calculator
- Dividend tax calculator
- Director's loan accounts (DLA)
- Close investment companies
- Associated companies and CT bands
- Optimal extraction by profit level
- Employer pension contributions
- Closing a company: strike-off vs MVL
- Business Asset Disposal Relief
- Dividend waivers and settlements
How UK Tax Drag holds itself to account
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