Sole Trader vs Limited Company (UK): The Real Differences Explained

6 Min Read

Choosing between being a sole trader and forming a limited company is one of the first major decisions UK founders make. On paper, it looks like a tax question. In reality, it affects your risk, credibility, admin workload, and how you pay yourself.

This guide breaks it down in plain English, with real-world examples.

1. Sole Trader — simple, direct, and flexible

A sole trader is the default structure for many new UK businesses. You register with HM Revenue & Customs and start trading under your own name (or a business name).

Legally, there is no separation between you and your business.

How sole trader tax actually works

You pay tax on profits, not revenue.

Example:

  • Revenue: £50,000
  • Expenses: £10,000
  • Profit: £40,000

You then pay:

  • Income Tax (20% / 40% depending on band)
  • Class 2 & Class 4 National Insurance

So your tax bill rises as your profit increases.

There is no way to “split” income between salary/dividends—you take money as drawings.

Day-to-day reality

  • You invoice clients personally
  • You keep simple accounts (income vs expenses)
  • You submit a Self Assessment tax return once a year
  • You can withdraw money freely (it’s all yours after tax)

There is very little separation between business and personal finances.

The big downside: personal liability

If your business builds debt, faces legal claims, or cannot pay suppliers, you are personally responsible.

That means personal assets (in extreme cases) are exposed.

This is the biggest structural risk.

When sole trader makes sense

  • Freelancers and consultants
  • Side businesses or early testing phase
  • Low overhead services (writing, design, tutoring)
  • Earnings under ~£50k–£70k (rule of thumb, not law)

2. Limited Company — a separate legal structure

A limited company is a legally distinct entity registered with Companies House.

This means:

The business exists separately from you.

It can own money, sign contracts, and incur debts in its own name.

How limited company tax actually works

The structure is more layered.

Step 1: Company pays Corporation Tax

  • Typically 19%–25% depending on profit level

Step 2: You pay yourself

Usually via:

  • Small salary (PAYE)
  • Dividends from remaining profits

Example (£50,000 profit)

Let’s simplify:

  • Company profit: £50,000
  • Corporation Tax (~25%): £12,500
  • Remaining: £37,500

You then take:

  • Salary (e.g. £12,570 tax-free allowance)
  • Dividends on the rest

This structure often results in lower total tax than sole trader at mid-to-high incomes, but depends heavily on how you structure withdrawals.

Day-to-day reality

Compared to sole trader, you now have:

  • Annual accounts filed to Companies House
  • Corporation Tax return to HM Revenue & Customs
  • Payroll setup if paying yourself a salary
  • Separate business bank account
  • More bookkeeping discipline required

It’s more structured, but also more “professional” in appearance.

The biggest advantage: limited liability

If the company fails:

  • Business debts stay with the company
  • Your personal assets are generally protected

This is crucial for:

  • Contracts with financial risk
  • Hiring staff
  • Scaling operations

When a limited company makes sense

  • Profit consistently above ~£50k–£80k
  • You want tax efficiency planning
  • You plan to hire or scale
  • You want external investment
  • You want stronger legal separation

Head-to-head comparison

1. Setup speed

  • Sole trader: same day
  • Limited company: 24–72 hours via Companies House

2. Admin workload

  • Sole trader: low
  • Limited company: medium to high (accounts, filings, payroll)

3. Tax flexibility

  • Sole trader: fixed structure
  • Limited company: flexible (salary + dividends strategy)
  • Sole trader: none
  • Limited company: strong separation (limited liability)

5. Professional perception

  • Sole trader: “individual freelancer”
  • Limited company: “established business”

(Not always fair—but it matters in some industries.)

The income tipping point (realistic view)

There is no official threshold, but in practice:

Under £30k profit

Sole trader is usually simpler and perfectly fine

£30k–£70k profit

Decision zone (depends on risk + growth plans)

£70k+ profit

Many switch to limited company for tax planning and liability protection

Common misconception (important)

“Limited companies always pay less tax.”

Not always true.

A limited company can be more tax-efficient, but:

  • You pay accountancy fees
  • You take on more admin
  • Poor salary/dividend planning can reduce benefits

It’s a tool—not a guaranteed tax hack.

Can you switch later?

Yes. Most UK founders:

  1. Start as sole trader
  2. Validate income
  3. Incorporate into a limited company later

This is completely normal and widely encouraged.

Final summary

Choose sole trader if you want:

  • Simplicity
  • Speed
  • Minimal admin
  • Low risk testing phase

Choose limited company if you want:

  • Growth and scaling
  • Legal protection
  • Tax structuring options
  • A more formal business structure
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