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Updated 30 April 2026 · Tax Planning

Sole trader to Ltd company — the breakeven calculator nobody runs (2025/26)

Every accountant has a rule of thumb for when a sole trader should incorporate. £30k. £40k. £50k. None of them are right in any general sense — the actual breakeven depends on your dividend pattern, what you take out vs leave in, your spouse’s tax position, and changes to corporation tax we’ve had since 2023. Here’s the real 2025/26 calculation.

Why the old rule of thumb broke

Three things changed since the simple “£30k = incorporate” advice:

The result: incorporation still saves money, but the saving is smaller than it used to be — and the breakeven is higher than the rule of thumb suggests.

The 2025/26 numbers

For both options below, assume the trader takes out everything they earn (no retained profits in the company). Personal allowance £12,570, higher-rate threshold £50,270.

Sole trader on £40,000 profit:

Same trader through Ltd, taking everything as low salary + dividends:

At £40k profit, sole trader actually wins by about £1,100/year because of the new employer NIC threshold + reduced dividend allowance.

Same small-business trader on £80,000 profit, full extraction:

Same trader on £150,000 profit, full extraction:

What shifts the breakeven

The above assumes full annual extraction. The picture changes radically if any of these apply:

What stays better as a sole trader

Worked example: £85,000 profit, basic-rate spouse

Trader earns £85k profit, has a spouse with a £25k salary (basic-rate taxpayer with ~£15k of unused basic-rate band).

The spouse-shareholder route saves £4,600/year over sole trader at this income level, vs only £1,400 for sole-shareholder Ltd. The biggest single planning lever for many small businesses.

Key takeaways

FAQ

Is incorporation reversible?

Technically yes (close the Ltd, return to sole trader) but rarely worth the cost. Closure via MVL is £2-5k. Best to pick the right structure from the start, not flip back and forth.

Do I need to incorporate before VAT registration?

No — sole traders register for VAT the same way as Ltds. The £90,000 turnover threshold applies regardless of structure. Incorporation is a tax-structure decision; VAT is a turnover-trigger decision.

How does Class 2 NIC abolition affect the comparison?

Class 2 NIC abolished from 2024/25 saves sole traders ~£180/year. Modest, but it slightly improves sole-trader economics at lower profit levels. Doesn’t shift the £45-50k crossover meaningfully.

We model every breakeven scenario for new clients before recommending a structure. Book a free 20-min review and we’ll show you exactly what you’d pay either way, with your actual numbers and family situation. Helpful for any small or medium business.

Shahood Ahmed
About the author

Shahood Ahmed BSc · FMAAT · AFA · MIPA

Founder & Managing Director · AudTax

Shahood is a fully qualified accountant with UK memberships across the AAT, IFA and IPA. After years in London practice, he founded AudTax to give UK business owners the proactive, partner-led accounting the big firms don't deliver — fixed fees, same-day replies, and a partner on the end of the phone who actually knows your business.

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