The short version: angel investing is a deal you negotiate, and equity crowdfunding is a deal you join. An angel sits across the table from a founder, agrees a price and terms, and puts in a cheque big enough to matter. A crowdfunding investor opens an app, reads a pitch the company has already packaged, and clicks to put in anything from a tenner upward on terms that are fixed before they arrive. Same destination - shares in a young private company - reached on completely different footing.
The two get blurred because they overlap at the cap table. Plenty of rounds now stack a crowdfunding tranche on top of an angel-and-fund round, so one company can have a single investor who haggled over a board seat and three thousand who clicked "invest" on the way to work. Here's what actually separates the routes, and where the UK tax reliefs land on each.
What is angel investing?
An angel is an individual putting their own money directly into a young, private company - frequently the first serious outside cheque a founder takes. The defining word is directly. The angel finds the deal, forms their own view, agrees the price and the terms, and signs. Cheques tend to run from a few thousand pounds to a few hundred thousand, and the stake is large enough that the angel often gets information rights, sometimes a board seat, and a real say in what happens next.
Access is the catch. Good angel deals move through warm networks - founders, syndicate leads, other angels - and getting into the room usually means you already know someone in it. The work is yours too: the diligence, the legal review, the judgement on whether the founder can actually build the thing. Nobody packages it for you. We cover the realities of that work elsewhere in what angels do beyond writing the cheque.
What is equity crowdfunding?
Equity crowdfunding lets a company raise money from a large number of people, each buying shares through an online platform. In the UK the household names are Crowdcube and Seedrs (now merged under one roof), alongside others. The platform is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority, lists the company's pitch, handles the payments, and holds the round open until the target is hit. You can typically invest from around £10 to £100 upward, which is how a single raise can attract thousands of backers.
The trade-off is that almost everything is decided before you see it. The valuation, the share class, the legal terms - the company and the platform have set them, and your choice is binary: in or out, at the listed price. You're not negotiating; you're subscribing. The platform also runs a layer of checks on the company before it lists, which is not the same as the diligence an angel would do, but it is more than nothing.
Because the FCA classes these as high-risk investments, platforms now gate access behind risk warnings, a short appropriateness test, and investor categorisation - restricted, sophisticated, or high-net-worth - before you can commit. You can read the regulator's own framing on the FCA crowdfunding pages.
So how do they actually differ?
Strip away the branding and four things separate the routes.
- Cheque size and stake. Crowdfunding is built for small amounts and tiny stakes; angels write larger cheques for a stake that's worth caring about. The angel's position is big enough to negotiate over - the crowd's, individually, is not.
- Access and control of terms. An angel shapes the deal. A crowdfunding investor accepts a deal already shaped. That's the heart of it: one route hands you the pen, the other hands you a price.
- Diligence. The angel does their own, or leans on a syndicate lead who has. The platform does a baseline screen and surfaces the documents, but the depth and the responsibility for understanding the risk still sit with you.
- The shares themselves. Angels often take ordinary shares with voting and information rights. The crowd frequently gets non-voting shares, or is pooled behind a nominee - a single entity that holds everyone's shares and votes them as a block. That changes what say you have and how you eventually sell.
None of this makes one route better than the other - they suit different amounts of money, different appetites for work, and different levels of access. What it does mean is that the same £2,000 behaves very differently depending on which door it walks through.
One route hands you the pen. The other hands you a price.
How do SEIS and EIS apply to each?
Here's the part that surprises people: the big UK reliefs don't care which route you took. SEIS, EIS and VCT reliefs attach to the shares and the company that issued them, not to whether you negotiated the deal or clicked a button. So a qualifying crowdfunding investment can carry the same relief as an angel deal in the same company - and platforms routinely flag which raises are SEIS or EIS eligible, precisely because it's a selling point.
The mechanics are identical either way. The company needs HMRC advance assurance before the round, and it issues you an SEIS3 or EIS3 certificate afterwards so you can claim. You normally have to be a UK taxpayer to use the reliefs. The headline investor figures, current as of HMRC guidance updated 6 April 2026:
- SEIS (the earliest stage): 50% income tax relief on up to £200,000 invested per tax year, with a three-year minimum holding period. There's a capital gains reinvestment relief worth 50% of a gain put into SEIS shares, on up to £100,000 of investment a year; gains on the shares themselves are exempt if held for three years with the income tax relief claimed. Loss relief is available, and relief can be carried back to the previous tax year.
- EIS (still early, slightly later): 30% income tax relief on up to £1,000,000 per tax year - or up to £2,000,000 if at least £1,000,000 of it goes into knowledge-intensive companies. Three-year minimum hold, capital gains deferral relief, gains exempt if held three years with relief claimed, loss relief, and carry-back to the previous year.
- VCT (Venture Capital Trusts, a listed managed vehicle - not a crowdfunding route, but worth knowing alongside): 20% income tax relief on up to £200,000 per tax year, a longer five-year minimum hold, tax-free dividends and no capital gains tax on gains. Unlike SEIS and EIS, loss relief is not available on a VCT.
On the company side, the schemes only fit small, young firms - SEIS is for companies trading under three years, with fewer than 25 full-time-equivalent staff and gross assets under £350,000, raising up to £250,000 in total under the scheme. EIS reaches larger companies (broadly, gross assets up to £30m before the raise and fewer than 250 employees), with annual and lifetime raise caps and knowledge-intensive variations that changed in April 2026 - check the current figures on gov.uk. The point for an investor is simple: eligibility follows the company, so confirm the relief on the specific raise rather than assuming it from the platform's logo.
Where the two routes meet
In practice the boundary bends. Some platforms run syndicate or lead-investor models, where a named angel sets the terms and the crowd follows on the back of their diligence - a hybrid that looks like crowdfunding from the front and angel investing from the side. Plenty of well-known rounds have layered a public crowdfunding tranche on top of a private angel-and-fund round, partly to raise money and partly to turn customers into shareholders.
The cleanest way to tell which one you're really doing is to ask two questions: did you set the terms, or accept them? And is your stake big enough to give you a say? Your answers place you on the spectrum far more reliably than the website you used.
A quick word on risk and advice
Neither route is the safer one. Early-stage companies fail often, the shares are illiquid and hard to sell, and you can lose your entire stake whichever door you came through. The tax reliefs exist because that risk is real, not as a reason to wave it away. The Carry is editorial journalism - general information, not financial or investment advice. Before you commit capital, take advice from an FCA-regulated adviser who knows your circumstances.
Frequently asked questions
Is equity crowdfunding the same as angel investing?
No. Both put money into early-stage private companies for shares, but an angel negotiates a deal directly and usually writes a larger cheque, while equity crowdfunding pools many small investments through an FCA-authorised online platform such as Crowdcube or Seedrs on terms the platform and company have already set. The access, the cheque size, the diligence and often the share class are different.
Can I claim SEIS or EIS relief on an equity crowdfunding investment?
Often, yes. SEIS and EIS reliefs attach to the qualifying shares, not to how you bought them, so a crowdfunding investment in a company with HMRC advance assurance can qualify in the same way an angel deal does. The platform usually flags which raises are SEIS or EIS eligible, and the company issues the SEIS3 or EIS3 certificate you need to claim. You normally have to be a UK taxpayer to use the reliefs.
How much money do you need for each?
Equity crowdfunding platforms often let you invest from around £10 to £100 upward, which is why the crowd can run to thousands of people. Angel cheques are far larger, commonly several thousand to several hundred thousand pounds, because the angel is negotiating directly and usually taking a more meaningful stake. This is general information, not advice on how much to commit.
Do crowdfunding investors get the same shares as angels?
Not always. The crowd frequently receives non-voting shares, or is grouped behind a nominee that holds the shares on everyone's behalf, while a lead angel may negotiate ordinary shares with voting rights and information rights. Read the share class and the nominee terms before you commit - they decide what say you have and how you exit.
Which is riskier?
Both are high-risk: early-stage companies fail often, the shares are illiquid, and you can lose your whole stake. The FCA treats equity crowdfunding as a high-risk investment and gates it behind risk warnings and investor categorisation. The route doesn't change the underlying risk of the company. This is general information, not investment advice.