Model the upfront 30% income tax credit, tax-free dividend stream, and tax-free disposal of a Venture Capital Trust investment under 2026/27 rules. Includes the £200,000 annual subscription cap and 5-year holding requirement.
High-risk investment. VCTs invest in small, early-stage companies and can lose substantial value. Tax reliefs are clawed back if shares are sold within 5 years. Always confirm with an adviser.
30% income tax relief on subscription up to £200,000 per tax year — deducted from your income tax liability for the year of investment. Cannot exceed the income tax actually owed.
Tax-free dividends from the VCT for as long as you hold the shares — these don't even count toward your Dividend Allowance and don't appear in income for the Personal Allowance taper.
Tax-free disposal — capital gains on selling the VCT shares are exempt from CGT, regardless of size.
To keep the upfront relief, you must hold the shares for at least 5 years from the original subscription. Selling earlier triggers a clawback of the 30% income tax relief proportional to the shortfall.
VCTs are easier to access (you buy units in a listed VCT vehicle, like a fund) and provide diversification across many small companies. EIS investments are direct into single companies, more concentrated risk, but with loss relief and IHT relief that VCTs lack.
Common VCT mistakes
Selling before 5 years. The 30% upfront relief is clawed back proportional to the early sale.
Buying secondary-market VCT shares (rather than new subscriptions). Only new subscriptions get the upfront 30% relief — secondary purchases get the dividend and CGT reliefs but not the income tax credit.
Forgetting the £200,000 annual cap. Investments above this cap don't attract the upfront relief.
Treating the 30% relief as risk-free return. VCT shares can fall in value; the 30% can be eaten through if the underlying companies underperform.
Failing to plan around the income tax liability. The relief is capped at your income tax for the year; if you have insufficient tax to absorb the full 30%, you waste relief.
How Venture Capital Trust (VCT) tax reliefs work, including the 30% upfront relief and tax-free dividends.
Charlotte — £25,000 VCT investment
VCT investment
£25,000
Income tax band
Higher rate (40%)
Current-year income tax liability
£20,000
VCT relief rate
30%
The math:
Upfront income tax relief: £25,000 × 30% = £7,500
Limited to actual income tax liability (£20,000) — fully usable here
Net cost of investment: £25,000 − £7,500 = £17,500
Must hold shares 5+ years to keep relief
Annual VCT dividends are completely tax-free (no PSA needed, no SA reporting)
On disposal: gains are CGT-exempt
Result: Charlotte's £25,000 invested becomes £17,500 net cost. Assuming 5-7% annual VCT dividend yield = £1,250-£1,750/year tax-free. Total tax-free dividends over 5 years could approach £8,000 on top of the £7,500 upfront relief — but VCTs are higher-risk than mainstream equities.
Henry — top-rate taxpayer using VCTs for retirement income
Salary
£200,000
VCT investment
£200,000 (the annual VCT limit)
Income tax band
Additional rate (45%)
The math:
Upfront relief: £200,000 × 30% = £60,000 reduction in income tax bill
Net cost: £200,000 − £60,000 = £140,000
Dividends from VCT typically 5-7% = £10,000-£14,000/year tax-free
Equivalent gross yield to a 45%-rate taxpayer if subject to dividend tax: £10,000 ÷ (1 − 0.3935) = £16,500
Locked-in tax-free yield equivalent to ~£16,500 of taxable dividends
Result: Henry sees an effective yield of 7-10% on his net £140,000 cost when grossed up for the tax he'd otherwise pay on equivalent dividends. VCTs are popular with high earners who've maxed pensions, but liquidity is poor and the underlying companies are early-stage — diversify across multiple VCTs.
Figures use 2026/27 UK tax-year rates and thresholds. Always verify against your specific payslip or tax statement before acting.
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