Business Management

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How to present a request for finance to your bank Managing for growth
The value of outsourcing Buy, HP, or lease?
Decide what your company stands for Staying on your feet
Cut your utility costs Prevent theft in the workplace
Insuring your business Internal controls help crack fraud
Dealing with employee absence Could your business survive without you?
Don't fall into the credit trap What is your business worth?
Employee share schemes Seven steps to successful business transition
Improving productivity How to balance your bank account
Employers - reduce your wage bill How to balance your sales control account
The national minimum wage How to balance your purchase ledger
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Employee Share Schemes

Share incentive plans

These plans provide three core elements which can be combined by companies in a number of ways depending on what best suits their business (limits are per employee):

  • Free shares up to a limit of £3,000 in any tax year

  • Partnership shares (purchased out of pre-tax and NIC salary) up to £1500 in any tax year (or 10% of overall salary, whichever is less). There may be a minimum limit of up to £10 on any occasion. Shares may be purchased annually rather than monthly.

  • Matching shares provided by the company to match employees' purchase of partnership shares, up to a limit of two for each partnership share purchased.

There is an overall limit of £3,000 of free/matching shares in any tax year.

The plan must be made available to all employees, but the company may set a qualifying period of up to 18 months. The only ways that an award of free shares can be varied from employee to employee are on the basis of remuneration, length of service, hours worked or performance.

Participants must not have a material interest in (ie owning or controlling more than 25% of the ordinary share capital of) the company.

There has to be a holding period of between three and five years for free and matching shares. During this period, employees are contractually bound to keep these shares in the plan.

Shares may be dividend shares and the company may choose to make dividend re-investment compulsory or optional. Total dividend reinvestment for any participant must not exceed £1,500 in a tax year. The holding period for dividend shares must be five years, and cannot be longer than this.

Shares have to come out of the plan when employees leave their job. Companies can decide that employees lose their free shares if they leave within three years.

Tax benefits

Employees who keep their shares in the plan for five years will pay no income tax or National Insurance in respect of those shares.

Employees who keep their shares in the plan for three years will pay income tax and National Insurance on the initial value of the shares; any increase in value of the shares will be tax free.

Employees who keep their shares in the plan until they sell will have no capital gains tax to pay. If they take them out and sell later, they will pay capital gains tax only on any increase in value after the shares come out of the plan.

Enterprise Management Incentives (EMI)

Under EMI, certain small higher-risk trading companies (quoted or unquoted, with gross assets of no more than £15 million) can grant options over a maximum of £3 million worth of shares at any one time. The options are normally free of income tax and National Insurance charges on grant and on exercise. When the shares are sold, capital gains tax taper relief normally starts from the date the options were granted.

Other Inland Revenue approved share schemes

These will remain in place for the time being. The main features are as follows:

Savings-Related Share Option Schemes (SAYE schemes or Sharesave)

Employees are granted options at a discount of up to 20% at the start of the savings contract. They can save a fixed monthly amount of between £5 and £250 for 3, 5 or 7 years. At the end of the savings contract a tax-free bonus is payable. Employees use the proceeds of the savings contract, including the bonus, if they want to exercise the option. If they do not, the proceeds are repaid in cash, tax free. There is no tax or National Insurance charged on the discount or on the gain made when the option is exercised.

Company Share Option Plan (CSOP)

Employees are granted options to acquire shares at the market price at the time of grant. Employees may be granted options over shares worth up to £30,000 at any one time. There is no tax or National Insurance charged on the gain made when the option is exercised, provided that the options are held for at least 3 years unless participation ends through disability, redundancy or retirement.

Unapproved schemes

These are subject to the general rules that employees are chargeable to income tax under Schedule E and National Insurance when, by reason of their employment:

  • they receive shares free or cheaply
  • they exercise a share option



Business: 
Personal:  Introduction to the Tax System | Planning Aspects | Home Aspects
Pensions | Aspects of Investments and Investing | VCT & EIS
Tax:  Budget Report | Tax Guide | Financial Planning Guide
Tax Calendar | IR35 | PAYE & NI | VAT | Year End Tax Planning





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