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Community Interest Companies: Understanding Your Tax Position

Jan 25, 2026

Being a social enterprise or Community Interest Company does not mean tax obligations disappear. In this episode, we walk through the real tax position for CICs, clearing up misunderstandings that regularly catch directors out. We cover corporation tax, VAT, payroll, grants, and how structure affects your tax exposure.

What Is a Community Interest Company?

A Community Interest Company is a special type of limited company created to serve the community. It sits between a traditional profit-making business and a charity. While the purpose is social or environmental, CICs are still companies and remain firmly within the UK tax system.

Corporation Tax and CICs

CICs pay corporation tax just like any other limited company. If trading income exceeds allowable expenses, the resulting surplus is taxable. Being values-led or not-for-profit does not remove this obligation.

Corporation tax rates currently range from 19% for profits up to £50,000, rising to 25% for profits over £250,000, with marginal relief applying in between. Making a surplus is not a failure — it shows sustainability. What matters is how that surplus is managed and reinvested.

VAT: A Common CIC Trap

VAT frequently causes problems for Community Interest Companies. Grants and donations are usually outside the scope of VAT and do not count toward the registration threshold. However, income from selling goods or services does.

If taxable turnover exceeds £90,000 over a rolling 12-month period, VAT registration becomes mandatory. Profitability is irrelevant. Voluntary registration may be possible, but charging VAT to non-VAT-registered communities can create real cost pressures.

Digital systems such as Xero cloud accounting help track turnover accurately and reduce the risk of missing VAT thresholds.

Employing Staff and PAYE

Once a CIC employs staff, PAYE applies. This includes registering as an employer, operating payroll, deducting tax and National Insurance, and paying employer contributions.

From April 2025, employer National Insurance applies once earnings exceed £5,000 per year, charged at 15%. Employment Allowance may reduce the impact, but payroll obligations remain.

Freelancers, Contractors, and Risk

CICs using freelancers must assess employment status correctly. The engager is responsible for determining whether someone is genuinely self-employed. This is based on control, substitution, and equipment — not personal preference.

CIC Structure: Shares vs Guarantee

CICs can be limited by guarantee or by shares. Guarantee-based CICs have members and reinvest all surpluses. Share-based CICs may pay dividends, but these are capped by regulation and are never tax-deductible.

The structure chosen affects profit distribution, funding options, and long-term strategy.

Grants and Tax Treatment

Grants are a major income source for many CICs. Most grants are restricted income and recognised in line with project delivery. Unused funds are deferred rather than treated as profit.

Grants usually fall outside VAT, unless linked to specific service delivery. While grants themselves may not be taxable, any surplus generated can still create tax implications.

Practical Tax Planning Tips

Keep Clear Records

Accurate records from day one reduce risk and stress. Cloud accounting provides visibility and control.

Plan for Tax Bills

If a surplus arises, setting aside funds early avoids last-minute pressure. Tax is a sign of success, not failure.

Understand Your Obligations

Corporation tax, VAT, PAYE, Companies House filings, and CIC regulator reporting all apply.

Seek Advice Early

Working with a CIC-aware adviser saves time, money, and unnecessary compliance issues.

Key Takeaways

Community Interest Companies are not exempt from tax. Corporation tax applies to surpluses, VAT applies to trading income, payroll applies to employees, and grants require careful accounting. The right systems and planning make compliance manageable.

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