SEIS through a limited company

SEIS through a limited company

Author
Discussion

Tyndall

Original Poster:

976 posts

142 months

Friday 3rd November 2023
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Can I take advantage of SEIS in a startup but investing cash via my existing Ltd company rather than personally?

If so how does the tax relief work? Everything I've read seems to relate to a 50% reduction in personal income tax rather than discussing via a company.

isleofthorns

547 posts

177 months

Friday 3rd November 2023
quotequote all
wouldn't have thought so... it's a personal relief

obviously, you'll have to pay tax to take money out from the company into your own account, the impact of which could be mitigated by the relief you'll then receive personally.

stub101

580 posts

223 months

Friday 3rd November 2023
quotequote all
I’m in no way giving formal advice but S/EIS tax relief is exclusively available to individuals to offset their personal tax bill.

Investments into startups can be made by limited company but are not S/EIS eligible. Investments via Ltd Co will reduce a businesses profit and therefore corporation tax liability so can (increasingly) be very useful.

As someone who deals with angel investments and S/EIS I am interestingly seeing more and more investments via Ltd CO’s/PSC’s, either exclusively or alongside personal investments which would likely benefit form S/EIS tax relief.

Seventy-Eight

374 posts

187 months

Saturday 4th November 2023
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stub101 said:
I’m in no way giving formal advice but S/EIS tax relief is exclusively available to individuals to offset their personal tax bill.

Investments into startups can be made by limited company but are not S/EIS eligible. Investments via Ltd Co will reduce a businesses profit and therefore corporation tax liability so can (increasingly) be very useful.

As someone who deals with angel investments and S/EIS I am interestingly seeing more and more investments via Ltd CO’s/PSC’s, either exclusively or alongside personal investments which would likely benefit form S/EIS tax relief.
I don't see how a company can reduce its CT liability by investing in another company?

Tyndall

Original Poster:

976 posts

142 months

Sunday 5th November 2023
quotequote all
Presumably as it reduces profit therefore CT payable on said profit?

stub101

580 posts

223 months

Sunday 5th November 2023
quotequote all
I’m not an accountant and haven’t used this method myself but as mentioned I’ve had a few people use it and each have referenced reduced CT. It will of course depend on lots of other factors.

Id be very interested to hear an accountants ‘top of head’ viewpoint.

NFT

1,324 posts

29 months

Sunday 5th November 2023
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stub101 said:
I’m not an accountant and haven’t used this method myself but as mentioned I’ve had a few people use it and each have referenced reduced CT. It will of course depend on lots of other factors.

Id be very interested to hear an accountants ‘top of head’ viewpoint.
Me too, as I believe the company will be investing and not any controlling/owning party unless money removed becoming subject to tax?

Seventy-Eight

374 posts

187 months

Sunday 5th November 2023
quotequote all
I can't see how a company investing in the shares of another company can reduce its CT bill. As far as I know the tax breaks under EIS are only applicable to individuals investing. I may be wrong though!

Eric Mc

122,856 posts

272 months

Monday 6th November 2023
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Seventy-Eight said:
I can't see how a company investing in the shares of another company can reduce its CT bill. As far as I know the tax breaks under EIS are only applicable to individuals investing. I may be wrong though!
Same here. SEIS is aimed at reducing an investor's personal Income Tax bill. At least, that is what I have always understood from the wording of the legislation.

Tyndall

Original Poster:

976 posts

142 months

Monday 6th November 2023
quotequote all
I read that as reducing CT bill by buying shares/investing in another company, not by buying SEIS shares.

Seventy-Eight

374 posts

187 months

Monday 6th November 2023
quotequote all
Tyndall said:
I read that as reducing CT bill by buying shares/investing in another company, not by buying SEIS shares.
Purchasing shares will not reduce a company's profit. Investments sit on the balance sheet.

Eric Mc

122,856 posts

272 months

Tuesday 7th November 2023
quotequote all
Exactly - it's an investment in an asset, not a business cost - so not eligible for offset against business profits.

Tyndall

Original Poster:

976 posts

142 months

Tuesday 7th November 2023
quotequote all
Understood, thank you. So AIUI the best way would be to withdraw the cash as salary then take advantage of the SEIS tax break.

ParkerTalbot

52 posts

38 months

Monday 13th November 2023
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If SEIS shares are held for 3 years then gifted to a child, at the point of sale in the future is the CGT relief attached to the shares or the previous individual who purchased them.

For example:

- Parents own SEIS shares they bought over 3 years ago (I believe they have to be held this long)
- Give shares to child
- Child sells shares after 2 years.

Does child have to pay CGT?

ParkerTalbot

52 posts

38 months

Thursday 16th November 2023
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Anyone know?

Eric Mc

122,856 posts

272 months

Thursday 16th November 2023
quotequote all
ParkerTalbot said:
Anyone know?
Without checking the detailed legislation I would guess that CGT might be payable.

At the point you gave the asset away, you might be subject to CGT based on the original purchase price versus the Market Value of the asset at the time you gifted it.

The recipient of the gift will be subject to CGT when they sell it. Their gain will be calculated by comparing the sale proceeds on the disposal versus the market value at the date of acquisition.

If these gains are lower than the personal Capital Gains threshold then no tax will be payable. Note that the CGT threshold have been serious reduced (was £12,300 - now £6,000).

ParkerTalbot

52 posts

38 months

Thursday 16th November 2023
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
Without checking the detailed legislation I would guess that CGT might be payable.

At the point you gave the asset away, you might be subject to CGT based on the original purchase price versus the Market Value of the asset at the time you gifted it.

The recipient of the gift will be subject to CGT when they sell it. Their gain will be calculated by comparing the sale proceeds on the disposal versus the market value at the date of acquisition.

If these gains are lower than the personal Capital Gains threshold then no tax will be payable. Note that the CGT threshold have been serious reduced (was £12,300 - now £6,000).
Thanks Eric, so despite SEIS shares being CGT free, you would say this relief disappears at the moment of them being given to a 3rd party?

Eric Mc

122,856 posts

272 months

Thursday 16th November 2023
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I'm not au fait with the specific rules for gifting SEIS shares.

NickZ24

264 posts

74 months

Saturday 18th November 2023
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ParkerTalbot said:
Anyone know?
Here it comes:
gov.uk said:
How the scheme works

The scheme:

offers tax reliefs to individual investors who buy new shares in your company
helps your company to raise money when it’s starting to trade

You can receive a maximum of £250,000 through Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme. This will:

include any other de minimis state aid received in the 3 years, up to and including the date of the investment
count towards any limits for later investments through other venture capital schemes

There are various rules you must follow so your investors can claim and keep the Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme tax reliefs relating to their shares.

Tax reliefs will be withheld, or withdrawn, from your investors if you do not follow the rules for at least 3 years after the investment is made.
Source:
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/venture-capital-scheme...

Eric Mc

122,856 posts

272 months

Saturday 18th November 2023
quotequote all
Yes - INCOME tax relief for individuals.

The question was whether a limited company could obtain CORPORATION tax relief.