The Enterprise Investment Scheme provides for some significant income tax and capital gains tax reliefs for individual investors in unquoted trading companies. There are some very complex conditions which must be met for the tax reliefs to be given, so this helpsheet can only give a brief overview of how the various tax reliefs work.
Claims for the tax relief cannot be made until a certificate has been received from the company issued on the authority of HMRC.
There are three separate EIS tax reliefs that can be summarised as follows…
The amount that can be invested into EIS shares is unlimited. However only £2,000,000 invested in any one tax year will attract income tax relief and capital gains tax exemption. Additionally, no more than £1,000,000 can be subscribed for shares that are not shares in a knowledge-intensive company.
For the purposes of investment a husband and wife or civil partners are treated separately.
The subscription must be wholly in cash (rather than loans) and the shares must be issued to raise money for a qualifying business activity. All of the money raised must be used for such an activity within 2 years of the shares being issued or if later within 2 years of commencing trade.
To qualify for the EIS income tax relief and CGT exemption the investor must not be connected with the company during a period starting two years before the issue of the EIS shares, and ending three years afterwards. This mainly excludes someone who is an employee or paid director of the company during that period, or who controls more than 30% of the company’s voting shares. The shareholdings of associated persons such as spouse and children, but not a brother or sister, will also be taken into account. A subscriber can receive reasonable remuneration as a director of the company after the shares are issued.
Any investor can benefit from CGT deferral on investment in EIS shares, whether connected to the company or not.
The EIS shares must be new ordinary shares that are not redeemable for at least three years. They must be fully paid up at the time of issue and carry no preferential rights to dividends or assets on liquidation of the company.
To issue EIS shares the company must be an unquoted company, which includes those listed on AIM, and there must be no arrangements for it to become quoted. For at least the three years after issuing the EIS shares it must carry on a trade or trades that do not include to a significant extent (taken to be 20% or more) an activity that is specifically excluded by the legislation. Excluded activities include leasing, banking, accountancy, dealing in land and land based trades such as farming, property development or nursing homes.
The total gross assets of the company must not exceed £15 million before the issue of shares nor £16 million afterwards. The company must have fewer than 250 full time employees (or equivalent part-timers) at the time the shares are issued. The permitted limit is 500 if the issuing company is a ‘knowledge-intensive company’ at the time the shares are issued.
No more than £5 million can be raised under the EIS, VCT or corporate venturing schemes in a 12 month period.
The company must not be in difficulty and must have a permanent establishment in the UK (but does not need to be carrying on a qualifying trade wholly or mainly in the UK).
The tax reliefs can be taken away if the EIS shares are disposed of within three years of issue, the company ceases to qualify as unquoted or trading, or the individual becomes connected with the company during the same year period. The tax relief may also be withdrawn if the investor receives value from the company in the period beginning two years before the issue of the shares to three years afterwards.
We can advise you on all aspects of qualification for both income tax and capital gains tax reliefs for EIS investments.
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