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UK dividend tax explained

Dividends are taxed more generously than savings interest.

The last few years have seen dividend tax rates steadily rise.

At the same time investors have seen a massive reduction in the already miserly tax-free dividend allowance.

Let’s update ourselves on where dividend tax rates and allowances now stand. We’ll then briefly consider how we got here, and what you can do about it.

Dividend tax rates and allowances

The rate of tax you’ll pay on your dividends depends on your income tax band.

UK dividend tax rates are currently:

  • Basic-rate taxpayers: 10.75%
  • Higher-rate taxpayers: 35.75%
  • Additional-rate taxpayers: 39.35%

The basic and higher rates were increased on 6 April 2026.

Note that depending on your total earnings – and where it comes from – you could pay tax at more than one rate on your income.

Importing note: we’re talking here about dividends paid outside of tax shelters. Dividends paid within ISAs and pensions are ignored with respect to tax. Are you adding up your dividends for your tax return? Don’t include dividends paid in ISAs or pensions – forget about them when it comes to tax! (Remember them when it comes to reinvestment to get rich.)

The tax-free dividend allowance 2026 to 2027 and beyond

Back in April 2024, the annual tax-free dividend allowance was halved to just £500.

It’s still stuck there today. Yet another frozen tax threshold!

The good news is that this £500 dividend allowance means you at least escape dividend tax on your first £500 of dividend income.

Dividends you receive within this tax-free dividend allowance are not taxed, irrespective of how much non-dividend income you earn and your tax bracket. But breach the allowance and the rest is taxed, as per your income tax band.

Like other tax allowances such as the personal allowance for income tax, the dividend allowance runs over the tax year. (From 6 April to 5 April the next year).

(Incidentally, if you recall the allowance being much more generous, you’re right. It has been slashed over the past few years. More on that below.)

What are dividends, anyway?

Dividends are cash payouts made by companies:

  • You may be paid dividends by shares listed on the stock market or by funds that own them.
  • You might also be paid dividends from your own limited company, as part of your remuneration.

As mentioned, dividend tax is only applied on dividends paid outside of a tax shelter.

Hence using ISAs and pensions is key to shielding your income-generating assets from tax for the long-term.

What tax rate will you pay on your UK dividends?

If your dividend income exceeds the tax-free dividend allowance, you’ll pay tax on the excess.

This liability must be declared and paid through your self-assessment tax return.

For example, if you received £6,000 in dividends in a year, then tax is potentially charged on £5,500 of it. (£6,000 minus the £500 tax-free dividend allowance).

The rate you’ll pay depends on which tax bracket your dividend income falls into.

Beware of being bounced into a higher tax band

If you own dividend-paying shares outside of an ISA or pension, then dividends may increase your taxable income. Perhaps by enough to push you into a higher tax bracket.

If you own funds outside of tax shelters, you could also owe tax on reinvested dividends. Choosing accumulation funds doesn’t spare you the tax rod – unless they’re safely bunkered in your tax shelters.

The lesson again is to avoid taxes reducing your returns by using ISAs and pensions.

Watch out for withholding tax on dividends

If you’re paid dividends from overseas companies, you may be charged tax on them twice. Once by the tax authorities where the company is based, and again by His Majesty’s finest in the UK.

You may even pay this withholding tax on foreign dividends held in an ISA or pension.

However there are reciprocal tax treaties between the UK and some other countries. These can reduce the total amount of dividend tax you pay.

Your broker should take care of this for you. (Check though!)

Some territories do not charge withholding tax on dividends received in a UK pension. The US most notably. (This kindly treatment doesn’t apply to ISAs. Choose where you shelter your US shares accordingly.)

Again, make sure your platform is paying you any US dividends in your pension without any tax having been charged.

It can all get a bit fiddly. See our article on withholding tax.

Why was the old dividend tax system changed?

Then-chancellor George Osborne revamped UK dividend taxation back in the summer budget of 2015.

Osborne apparently wanted to remove the incentive for people to set themselves up as limited companies and then use dividends as a more tax-efficient way to get paid, compared to salaries.

Osborne also said the changes enabled him to reduce the rate of corporation tax.

Whatever his intentions, today’s regime applies equally to all dividends – whether received from ordinary shares or from limited companies.

Even worse, an initially fairly-generous dividend allowance of £5,000 – designed to prevent small shareholders being taxed on legacy portfolios – is now just £500.

At the same time dividend tax rates have ratcheted higher. Notably in 2022, when the rates were increased by 1.25 percentage points, and then in 2026, when the basic and higher rates were lifted by another two percentage points.

I hope you’re keeping notes at the back.

Admittedly, small investors have generaly not been hit by these changes. That’s because most of us hold our shares within ISAs and pensions, so we’re not affected by dividend taxation.

However there are exceptions.

Business owners paid a dividend by their limited companies now pay more tax. Their salary-sized dividends quickly chew through the £500 dividend allowance.

There is also a dwindling cohort of older investors who built up big portfolios of income shares outside of ISAs and pensions. They’re paying far more tax on dividends, too.

Always use your tax shelters

For years I urged such dividend-focused investors to move as much money as possible into ISAs.

They could have done this by defusing gains to fund their ISAs every year, for example.

Early action was important because the annual ISA allowance is a use-it-or-lose-it affair. Hence you must build up your total ISA capacity over many years.

Yet inexplicably to me, some of those unsheltered dividend investors argued – even in the Monevator comments – that there was no point.

Dividends were not taxed until you hit the higher-rate band, they said. So why bother?

Well, that was true under the old system. And maybe there was a hard choice to be made if you also had massive cash savings. In that case there was competition as to how to best to divvy up your annual ISA allowance.

But taxes on dividends were always vulnerable to change, like everything else in our convoluted tax code. And eventually they did.

At that point, the people who had declined to move some or all of their portfolios into ISAs – just to save a few quid – began to be hit with large tax bills.

I hate to say I told you so. (Truly – I run this blog to help people.)

ISA sheltering costs nothing. Even back then there was at most a trivial cost difference between an ISA and a trading account. Nowadays there’s usually none.

The moral of the story is to get any non-sheltered portfolios into an ISA (and/or a SIPP) as soon as possible.

Not only because of dividend tax, but also to shelter from capital gains taxes and future regulatory changes.

Note: Comments below may refer to old (or incorrect) dividend tax rates and allowances. Please check the dates if unsure.

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UK tax deadline: how to make use of all your tax allowances post image

The tax year runs from 6 April to 5 April the next year. This means that the most crucial UK tax deadline occurs every April.

That’s because there exist various annual allowances and tax reliefs that you need to make use of to legally mitigate your income tax bill and stop taxes devouring your investment returns.

Most of these are ‘use it or lose it’ allowances with a 5 April deadline.

It’s no good bemoaning in June that you should have filled your ISA allocation by 5 April, but you were too preoccupied by the Donald Trump Show or the Six Nations rugby!

No point cursing if you create a £500 capital gains tax liability in July that you might have defused in March!

Ch-ch-changes

Of course you read Monevator. You know this kind of stuff. But it’s still all too easy to overlook something.

Especially when the tax rules keep changing! (For example, the basic and higher rates of dividend tax were increased in April 2026. Remember?)

Let’s run through a checklist of what to think about as the UK tax deadline draws near.

Follow the links in each section to go deeper.

ISA allowance

ISAs shelter investments from tax.

The annual ISA allowance is the maximum amount of new money you can put each year into the range of tax-free savings and investment accounts that comprise the ISA family.

The ISA allowance for the current tax year to 5 April is £20,000.

You cannot carry forward or rollback this ISA allowance. What you don’t use in the tax year is lost forever.

ISAs are a superb vehicle for growing your wealth tax-free. But the fiddly rules – seemingly made up by a bureaucrat with a grudge against mankind – are subject to change over time.

Watch out for rule tweaks

For example, as of the 2024-25 tax year you can open multiple ISAs of the same type in the same tax year.

Previously you could only open one new ISA of each type in a tax year.

Note though that you can only contribute £20,000 in total to your ISAs a year – old or new. And it’s down to you to keep track of your running total.

Also, you can still only pay into one Lifetime ISA per year. The maximum contribution here is £4,000. This counts towards your £20,000 annual ISA allowance.

Another recent-ish change is that you can now make partial ISA transfers – although not all platforms will accept them. (Under the old rules, if you contributed to an ISA and then wanted to transfer the funds to a different provider in the same tax year, you had to transfer all of that year’s ISA contributions).

And another: fractional shares can now be held in a stocks and shares ISAs. They’re listed as ‘fractional interests’ on this page of qualifying investments.

My co-blogger wrote the definitive guide to the ISA allowance.

Pension contributions annual allowance

There is a limit to how much money you can contribute to your pension in a given tax year while still receiving tax relief on those contributions.

It is sometimes referred to as the pension annual allowance.

Despite massive speculation with every Budget, the allowance is still £60,000. 1

Also note that unused pension annual allowance can generally be carried forward for up to three tax years, subject to the usual pernickety conditions you always see with pensions and taxes. (Hargreaves Lansdown has a decent guide).

Note that the rules about inheritance tax and pensions were thrown into the Magimix blender in late 2024:

Pensions put off taxes

Saving into a pension is mostly a tax-deferral strategy. That’s because you’re eventually taxed on pension withdrawals, unlike money you take out of an ISA tax-free.

In theory this makes ISAs and pensions equivalent from the perspective of tax.

In practice though, the fact that you can also draw a special tax-free lump sum from your pension gives pensions an edge in tax-terms – albeit at the cost of locking away your money for years.

Weigh up the pros and cons of each tax wrapper. We think most people should do both.

You can reduce your marginal tax rate by making pension contributions, if you can afford to go without the money today. Those on higher-rate tax bands should definitely do the maths:

Personal savings allowance

Under the personal savings allowance:

  • Basic-rate taxpayers can earn £1,000 per year in savings interest without having to pay tax.
  • Higher-rate taxpayers can earn £500 per year.
  • Additional rate taxpayers don’t get any personal savings allowance.

Back when interest rates were very low, these savings allowances seemed quite generous.

But rising rates have changed everything. Even interest on unsheltered emergency funds can now take you over the personal savings allowance and see some of your interest being taxed.

Redo your sums. Higher-rate taxpayers should look into holding low-coupon short duration gilts instead. Recently these have offered a lower-taxed alternative to savings interest.

Dividend allowance

The annual tax-free dividend allowance was reduced to £500 in April 2024.

Dividends you receive within the tax-free dividend allowance are not taxed. But breach the allowance and you’ll pay a specific dividend tax rate on the rest, according to your income tax band.

You can avoid the whole palaver by investing inside an ISA or pension.

Capital gains tax allowance

Everyone has an annual capital gains tax allowance, or ‘annual exempt amount’ in the lingo of HMRC.

This allowance was halved to £3,000 from 6 April 2024.

It is still (for now) frozen at this level.

Capital gains tax is levied on the profits you make when you sell or transfer most assets. These assets include everything from shares and buy-to-let properties to antiques and gold bars.

You can shield your stock market gains from capital gains tax by investing within ISAs and pensions. Go re-read the relevant bits above if you skimmed them!

EIS and VCT investments

You can also reduce your taxes by investing in Venture Capital Trusts (VCTs) and Enterprise Investment Schemes (EIS).

These vehicles are mostly marketed at wealthy high-earners for whom the large income tax breaks are attractive.

But be aware that these tax reliefs come with all kinds of risks, rules, and regulations.

VCTs

VCTs are venture capital funds run by professional managers who make investments into startup companies.

But somewhat quixotically, VCTs don’t even pretend to try to deliver high venture-style returns for investors.

Instead they aim to return cash via steady tax-free dividends.

You can invest up to £200,000 a year into VCTs. You must then hold them for at least five years to keep your 20% income tax relief.

(The tax relief rate was lowered from the longstanding 30% in April 2026).

VCT fund charges are invariably expensive, and the returns mostly mediocre – especially if you back out the tax reliefs.

EIS

EIS investing is even riskier than VCTs. Qualifying companies are usually very young, and many investors buy into them via crowdfunding platforms, rather than through professional fund managers.

The quality of these EIS opportunities is extremely variable, and information is usually scanty.

And while there have been a few big crowdfunded winners, the majority do poorly and often go to zero.

If you’re a baller who buys Lamborghinis before breakfast, you may already know you can put up to £1m a year into EIS investments. (Up to £2m if you’re investing in ‘knowledge intensive companies’).

You can also still knock 30% of your EIS investment amount as tax relief from your income tax bill – presumably because EIS investments are deemed riskier than VCTs – and there are other reliefs should things go wrong.

But you must hold EIS investments for three years to qualify for the tax relief – again a slightly better deal than with VCTs, presumably to compensate you for higher risk.

Most people shouldn’t put more than fun money into EIS or even VCT schemes, in our opinion. Certainly not unless they’re very sophisticated investors or getting excellent financial advice.

Check in on your tax band and personal allowances

The rate of income tax you pay depends on your total income from all sources. This includes salary, interest, dividends, pensions, property letting, and so on.

You add up all this income to get your total income figure.

You then subtract your personal allowance from the total to see which tax bracket you fit into.

Everyone starts with the same personal allowance, regardless of age:

  • The personal allowance is currently £12,570

Your personal allowance may be bigger if you qualify for Married Couple’s Allowance or Blind Person’s Allowance.

However the Personal Allowance goes down by £1 for every £2 of income above a £100,000 limit. It can go down to zero.

For England, Wales, and Northern Ireland, the income bands after deducting allowances are:

Income Tax Rate Income band
Starting rate for savings: 0% £0-£5,000
Basic rate: 20% £0- £37,700
Higher rate: 40% £37,701-£125,140
Additional 45% rate £125,141 and above

Source: HMRC

Note: If your non-savings taxable income is above the starting rate limit, then the starting savings rate does not apply to your savings income.

Scotland has its own income tax rates.

As we’ve seen above, there are further allowances and reliefs for income from certain sources – such as dividends and savings – that can reduce how much of that particular income is taxable.

You can take steps such as making additional pension contributions or having a spouse hold certain assets to further reduce your taxable income or the highest rate of tax you pay.

Don’t make the UK tax deadline into a crisis

Scrambling to exploit these allowances before the tax year ends is not only stressful – it’s financially suboptimal.

If you had cash lying around that you might have put into an ISA earlier in the year, for example, then it could have been earning a tax-free return for months beforehand.

But don’t blush too hard if you find yourself in this position.

Most of us are similar, which is why we wrote this article – and why the financial services industry bombards us with ISA promotions every March.

Try to automate your finances to invest smoothly and intentionally over the year.

And remember that April also brings warmer weather and longer days. Life is about much more than money and taxes!

Save and invest hard, take sensible steps to mitigate your tax bill, and enjoy life like a billionaire with whatever you’ve got leftover.

  1. Very high-earners are subject to a much-fiddled with taper that reduces their allowance. It is reduced by £1 for every £2 someone earns over £260,000, including pension contributions.[]
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Can’t fit all your investments into your ISAs and SIPPs? Then you can reduce your tax bill by following the first rule of tax-efficient investing:

Squeeze the most heavily taxed investments into your tax shelters first.

Happily, the pecking order for maximum tax efficiency is clear cut for most people.

Tax-efficient investing priority list

Shelter your assets in this order:

  • Non-reporting offshore funds
  • Bond funds, money market funds, UK REITs 1, and PIAFs 2
  • Individual bonds
  • Income-producing equities
  • Foreign equities (arguable, from a dividend perspective)

To see why this sequence is the most tax efficient, let’s just tee up the relevant tax rates:

 2026/27 Income tax Dividend tax Capital Gains Tax
Tax-free allowance £12,570 £500 £3,000
Basic rate taxpayer 20% 10.75% 18%
Higher rate taxpayer 40% 35.75% 24%
Additional rate taxpayer 45% 39.35% 24%

From 6 April 2027, tax on savings income – as paid by money market, treasury bills, and bond funds – rises to 22%, 42%, and 47% for basic, higher, and additional rate tax-payers respectively. The same rate will also apply to property income from 6 April 2027. This is payable by UK REITs and PIAFs but not ordinary REIT tracker funds.

At a glance we can see that income tax is the nastiest while capital gains tax (CGT) is generally the most benign. Your CGT burden can also be reduced by offsetting gains against losses.

So the plan is to shelter investments that are liable to income tax first, dividend tax second, and CGT third.

A few tax efficiency caveats to consider

Before we get into the guts of it, I’ve got to dish up some caveat pie:

  • Interest is taxed at your usual income tax rate until 6 April 2027. Basic-rate payers have a £1,000 personal savings allowance, reduced to £500 for higher-rate payers and nil pounds beyond that.
  • A few very low earners qualify for an additional band of tax relief on savings. Up to £5,000 of interest can be sheltered under the ‘Starting Rate for Savings’.
  • If your interest, dividend income, or capital gains pushes you into a higher tax band then you will pay a higher rate of tax on the protruding part.
  • In that situation, it matters what order you’re taxed in, so you can make the most of your tax-free allowances. The UK order of taxation is: non-savings income, savings income, dividend income, and finally capital gains.
  • Never neglect the tax-deflecting powers of ISAs and SIPPs.
  • If you’re unsure which wrapper is best for saving, then read our take on the ISA vs SIPP debate. Most people should probably diversify across both tax-efficient investing shelters. But there are a some important wrinkles to think about.

Let’s now look in more detail at – all things being equal – the best order of sheltering assets for tax-efficient investing, starting at the top.

Non-reporting offshore funds

Offshore funds that do not have reporting fund status are taxed on capital gains at income tax rates. And as you can see from the table above, that’s a hefty tax smackdown.

Worse still, your capital gains allowance and offsetting losses are knocked out of your hands by HMRC like the school bully taking your lollipop.

If your offshore fund or exchange-traded product (ETP) doesn’t trumpet its reporting status on its factsheet then it probably falls foul.

It’s worth double-checking HMRC’s list of reporting funds. Many offshore funds / ETPs available to UK investors don’t qualify. Also, it’s possible for a reporting fund to lose its special status.

Any fund that isn’t domiciled in the UK counts as an offshore fund. (Sometimes it’s worth saying the obvious!)

Bond and money market funds

Money market fundsbond funds, and even treasury bills are next into the tax bunker because interest payments are taxed at income tax rates rather than as dividends. (And on the higher ‘savings income tax’ rates from 6 April 2027.)

Any investment vehicle that has over 60% of its assets in fixed income or cash at any point in its accounting year falls into this category.

However, because these distributions count as savings income, interest payments are also protected by your Personal Savings Allowance (and even the Starting Rate for Savings).

Bond fund capital gains fall under capital gains tax, naturally.

Money market funds typically achieve at most miserly capital gains.

Treasury bills count as deeply discounted securities. Essentially they’re designed to make a capital gain rather than pay interest. But the capital gain counts as savings income.

Our Treasury bill article explains the weirdness.

Starting Rate for Savings – bonus protection

Some people – most likely retirees – can find themselves with low earnings income but reasonable savings income.

Such savings income can be sheltered by the Starting Rate for Savings.

Savings income that sits in a £5,000 band beyond your Personal Allowance may qualify for a 0% rate of income tax thanks to the Starting Rate for Savings rules.

That’s most likely to happen if your non-savings income plus savings income lands somewhere between £12,570 and £17,570.

(The upper limit can be increased if you’re eligible for additional tax-free allowances.)

Beware that every pound you earn (in non-savings income) over £12,570 shaves £1 from your £5,000 Starting Rate for Savings allowance.

So if you earn over £17,570 in non-savings income then you won’t get any Starting Rate for Savings privileges.

Whereas, £14,000 in non-savings income leaves you with another £3,570 in savings income that can be protected using your Starting Rate for Savings.

Any savings income that can’t huddle behind the Starting Rate for Savings barricade can still duck under the Personal Savings Allowance.

All this begs the question: what counts as earnings income?

The main categories are:

  • Income from work, whether employed or self-employed
  • Pension withdrawals including the State Pension
  • Retirement annuities
  • Rents
  • Taxable benefits

It’s obviously less urgent to get all your bonds into your ISAs and SIPPs if you can earn interest tax-free via the Starting Rate for Savings and Personal Savings Allowance routes.

As mentioned though, bonds can make capital gains. Intermediate to long maturity bond funds have the most potential to land you with a significant CGT bill, whereas short bonds tend to be more cash-like.

UK Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) / PIAFs

UK REITs and PIAFs pay some of their distributions as Property Income Distributions (PIDs).

PIDs are taxed at income tax rates not as dividends. UK REITs and PIAFs will pay higher property income tax rates from 6 April 2027. Those rates will be 22%, 42%, and 47% for basic, higher, and additional rate tax-payers respectively.

Get them under cover for optimal tax-efficient investing. PIDs are paid net so make sure you claim back any tax due if you tax shelter ’em.

REIT tracker funds and ETFs distributions are liable to the standard dividend income tax rate, not the higher property income tax rate.

Individual bonds

Individual bonds are liable for income tax on interest – just like bond funds.

The only reason that bonds are slightly further down the list is because individual gilts and qualifying corporate bonds are not liable for capital gains tax.

We’ve previously delved into the differences between how bonds and bond funds are taxed.

There are also some particularly intriguing low coupon gilts on the market that pay very little interest. Instead, their future cashflows are heavily skewed towards capital gains – which are tax-free.

Check them out if you’re comfortable with buying individual gilts and would like to reduce your tax bill.

Income-producing equities

The dividend tax situation has got a lot worse for UK investors in recent years, so high-yielding shares and funds should duck under your tax testudo next.

By all means prioritise protection for your growth shares if you think CGT is the bigger problem.

But bear in mind you can still defuse some capital gains every year – although this mitigation measure has been hugely eroded by the shrinking capital gains allowance – and you can usually defer a sale.

Foreign equities

It isn’t necessarily a priority to get overseas funds and equities sheltered, but there’s a tax-saving wrinkle here that only works with SIPPs.

The issue is withholding tax, which is levied by foreign tax services on dividends and interest you repatriate from abroad.

Sometimes withholding tax will be refunded as long as you fill in the right forms. For example a 30% tax chomp on distributions from US equities becomes a mere 15% if your broker has the appropriate paperwork.

Foreign investments in SIPPs can often have all withholding tax refunded but only if your broker is on the ball (and the appropriate agreements are in place). You’d need to check. ISAs don’t share this feature.

Note that if you hold foreign equities outside of a tax shelter then you can use whatever withholding tax you have paid to reduce your UK dividend bill.

So in the case of US equities, a basic-rate taxpayer could use the 15% they’ve paid in the US to reduce their 7.5% HMRC liability to zero.

In other words, only higher-rate / additional-rate taxpayers should consider sheltering US equities in ISAs from a dividend perspective. (There’s still capital gains tax to think about in the long-term, remember.)

Everyone can benefit from the SIPP wrapper, though.

Bow-wowing out

It just remains to say that this is generalised guidance and tax is a byzantine affair. Please check your personal circumstances. (We cannot give individual advice – even if we knew you, which we don’t!)

Tax efficiency is important but whatever happens don’t let the tax tail wag your investment dog.

Take it steady,

The Accumulator

Note: This article on tax-efficient investing has been given a tidy up after a few years out in the pastures. Comments below might refer to previous tax rates and allowances. So do check the date they were posted!

  1. Real Estate Investment Trusts[]
  2. Property Authorised Investment Funds[]
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Capital gains tax in the UK

UK capital gains tax explained

Until the government starts taxing sex, capital gains tax (CGT) is probably the most annoying tax to pay. 1

Capital gains tax is levied on the profits you make when you sell or transfer most assets. These assets include shares, investment properties – even a stake in your own company.

Like a maggot in your birthday cake, capital gains tax can really spoil the fun of making money.

Inheritance tax is a tax on your good fortune. Income tax is the cost of having a job.

But CGT is a tax on investing success.

Take cover from CGT where you can! Always try to use ISAs and pensions to shelter your investments from taxes. No tax is payable on gains realised within these wrappers.

Of course, you won’t always make a profit when you sell an investment.

Sometimes you’ll lose money. That’s called a capital gains loss.

Unfortunately you don’t get money back from the government when you lose money.

However you can offset your capital losses against your gains to reduce your total taxable gain. You can also defuse unsheltered gains using your annual CGT allowance.

How UK capital gains tax works

Like income tax, CGT is calculated on the basis of the tax year. This runs from 6 April to 5 April the following year.

You pay tax on the total taxable gains you make selling assets in the tax year, after taking into account:

  • Your annual CGT allowance. (See below).
  • Other reliefs or costs that can reduce or defer the gains.
  • Allowable losses you made by selling assets that would normally be liable for CGT. (The opposite of a capital gain, in other words).

Everyone has an annual capital gains tax allowance, or ‘annual exempt amount’ in HMRC-speak.

  • The allowance is currently £3,000. 2

If your total taxable gains, minus any deductions, come to more than your annual tax-free allowance, then you pay CGT on everything over that allowance.

Capital gains tax rates

  • Basic-rate taxpayers pay 18% on their capital gains.
  • Higher-rate taxpayers pay 24%. 

These rates were increased in the October 2024 Budget. (The previous levels were 10% and 20% respectively.)

CGT: We’re all in it together

Before the October 2024 Budget, second homes and buy-to-let properties 3 were taxed at higher rates than other assets such as shares.

However CGT rates on non-property assets were increased in the Budget to the same level as those levied on property gains.

Meanwhile the rates levied on property were left unchanged.

Hence all chargeable assets are now taxed at those same 18% and 24% rates.

Your main home is nearly always exempt from capital gains tax under what’s called Private Residence Relief. This is automatically applied, although complications can arise if part of the property has been let out, been used exclusively for business, or includes substantial grounds. In those cases, CGT might be payable.

Note that you might normally be a basic-rate taxpayer, but pay a higher rate on your capital gains. This could happen if the money made via your gains moves you into the higher-rate tax bracket.

To work out what rate you’ll pay, your capital gain is added to your taxable income from other sources (salary, dividends, savings interest, and so on).

It can get a bit complicated. See HMRC’s notes on working out your capital gains tax rate band.

Mind your own business

If you sell a business – or a significant share of a private business – then you might qualify for special rates of capital gains tax on your gains. The main relief available is called Business Asset Disposal Relief 4. There’s also the more niche Investors’ Relief.

Since 6 April 2026, both may now enable qualifying disposals to be charged at a potentially reduced CGT rate of 18% (rather than the 24% that would typically be levied as chunky transactions push the taxpayer into the higher-rate bracket).

There’s also a £1 million lifetime limit for both reliefs.

Both reliefs come with strict conditions. You’ll want to take professional advice.

Incidentally, these reliefs have (surprise!) become less generous in recent years. They used to bring the CGT rate down to as low as 10%, and years ago the lifetime limits were £10m.

Yes, despite rampant inflation in recent years, the lifetime limits have been slashed not raised. So much for encouraging entrepreneurs!

What is CGT charged on?

Historically speaking, CGT has been a fairly avoidable tax for most everyday investors in the UK.

(Remember, you’re allowed to mitigate your taxes. Tax evasion is illegal.)

However the big decline in the annual CGT allowance – from over £12,000 a few years ago to just £3,000 – has made it much harder to mitigate a potential capital gains tax bill.

Putting assets into tax shelters before they make any gains has thus become even more important.

Most capital gains on asset sales are taxable, but in the UK capital gains tax is NOT charged on:

That still leaves many key assets liable for UK capital gains tax:

Remember if you can hold these assets inside a tax shelter (ISA or pension) then you’ll escape the sting of capital gains tax. 

Also remember that annual capital gains tax allowance. So you won’t necessarily be liable for CGT just because you’ve sold some taxable assets and made a profit. It depends on your total capital gains for the year.

You might be able to postpone paying your CGT bill by claiming deferral relief on certain government-sanctioned investment schemes (EIS and SEIS). However these investments can be very risky.

Do your research. Don’t risk big losses just to cut your tax bill.

When to report capital gains tax

You need to report your taxable gains via your self-assessment tax return if:

  • Your total taxable gain in the tax year exceeds your CGT allowance, and/or
  • Your sales of taxable assets are in excess of £50,000 and you’re registered for self-assessment.

Under the current regime, if you sold £20,000 worth of shares in the year for a total gain of £2,000, there’s no need to report any of it. Your £2,000 in gains is below the annual CGT allowance. And your total sales were less than £50,000. 5

In contrast, if you’d sold £52,000 of shares, say, and you are registered for self-assessment, then you would have to report the details to HMRC, regardless of the size of your total gain. That’s because you’ve sold taxable assets in the year in excess of the £50,000 threshold.

Capital gains are pooled together

All capital gains and losses go into the same ‘pot’ from the Inland Revenue’s point of view.

For example, if you made a gain (i.e. profit) of £15,000 selling shares and £8,000 from selling an antique wardrobe, then your total capital gain is £23,000.

Here losses might help you out.

For example, let’s imagine you make a taxable gain on your shares but a loss on selling your buy-to-let property. Your property loss can be offset against your capital gains on shares to reduce or even wipe out the tax bill that might otherwise be due.

See my article on mitigating capital gains tax for other strategies.

Who pays Capital Gains Tax in the UK?

Very few people actually pay capital gains tax. A recent study of anonymised personal tax returns found that 97% of people never make any chargeable capital gains. Those who did were generally drawn from the ranks of the wealthy.

According to the Guardian:

Just 0.3% of people with income under £50,000 had taxable gains in an average year, compared with almost 40% of taxpayers with incomes over £5m receiving some gains.

Almost half of those who made a capital gain lived in the south-east. A quarter lived in London.

So paying capital gains tax puts you into a fairly exclusive club.

For investors, however, capital gains is an occupational hazard. If you are not able to do all of your investing inside ISAs and pensions, then you will probably pay CGT sooner or later.

Especially given how the annual CGT allowance has been slashed in recent years.

How do the UK’s CGT rates compare with other countries?

Even at the new higher rates, the UK regime is fairly competitive. Here are some example headline rates from our peers as of September 2024:

Source: Financial Times

It’s tricky comparing rates between different countries, as there can be lots of quirks, extra levies, and special allowances. Some countries may impose a wealth tax, or seek to generate revenues via higher transaction taxes.

The UK isn’t the only nation with a complicated tax code!

Certain jurisdictions do not charge CGT at all. These include the Bahamas, Belgium, Bermuda, the Cayman Islands, Gibraltar, Hong Kong, Jersey, Guernsey, the Isle of Man, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Singapore.

Capital gains tax and me

I’ve paid CGT. I wasn’t even very wealthy at the time. Certainly my annual income was no great shakes.

I began investing 20-odd years ago with a biggish lump sum that I’d originally saved up as a house deposit.

I should have steadily put this cash into ISAs over the ten years or so it took me to save it. But I was silly and I didn’t. And so when I began investing, I had to build up my ISA tax shelter capacity from scratch. One year’s allowance at a time.

Eventually this landed me with a five-figure CGT bill when I sold the last of my unsheltered investments – and this despite years of diligently defusing my gains along the way.

You make your own luck

That investment had gone up more than ten-fold since I bought it outside of an ISA, a decade or so earlier.

Lucky me, you say?

Perhaps, but remember I wasn’t super-rich. I began as just a determined saver trying to keep up with the runaway London housing market. My initial deposit comprised of several tens of thousands of pounds of hard-won savings that I could have spent instead on holidays, clothes, or simply having more fun in my 20s and 30s, like most of my friends.

That is why I usually write that you ‘make’ a capital gain, or even that you ‘earn’ a gain.

Whereas The Guardian with its own biases says you ‘receive’ it. As if the capital gain just falls from the sky – like windfall!

That is true of an inherited gain, say – at least for the recipient

But capital gains nearly always only come after you’ve risked your own money.

So do what you can to keep hold of that reward in full by shielding your investments from capital gains tax.

  1. Update: since I first wrote this article I bought my own home and paid Stamp Duty Land Tax at 5%. Turns out that’s just as annoying.[]
  2. It was halved on 6 April 2024 and has since been frozen at this level.[]
  3. Held personally. Properties held via a limited company are on a different regime.[]
  4. Formerly known as Entrepreneur’s Relief.[]
  5. Remember, these are sales outside of an ISA or SIPP. Sales within shelters are not liable for CGT and not counted at all.[]
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