Tax reporting for angel investors: what HMRC needs.

For most UK angels it comes down to one thing - a Self Assessment return, with the right certificate numbers in the right boxes. Here's what HMRC actually wants, and when.

For the overwhelming majority of UK angels, "tax reporting" means one document: the Self Assessment return. It's the channel through which you claim your reliefs, declare your gains, and book your losses. Get the return right and HMRC needs nothing else from you. Get the supporting paperwork wrong - a missing certificate, a reference left blank - and the relief you were counting on simply doesn't land.

So the real question isn't "what does HMRC want" in the abstract. It's: which boxes, which numbers, and by when. Let's take it in order.

Do you even need to file a return?

Writing an angel cheque doesn't, by itself, oblige you to file. You file because you have something to report or something to claim. For an active angel, that "something" almost always shows up: you want the SEIS or EIS income tax relief, you've crystallised a capital gain, or a portfolio company has failed and you're claiming loss relief. Any one of those means a return.

If you've never filed before, you have to register with HMRC first, and the deadline to register for a given tax year is 5 October after that year ends. Leave it later and you're into penalty territory before you've claimed a thing. The practical move is to register the moment you know you'll have something to report.

SEIS and EIS: the certificate comes first

This is where most of the value - and most of the friction - sits. Before you can claim a penny of SEIS or EIS income tax relief, the company has to send you a compliance certificate: an SEIS3 for the Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme, an EIS3 for the larger Enterprise Investment Scheme. The certificate confirms HMRC has authorised the company to treat your shares as qualifying, and it carries the unique investment reference you'll type onto your return. No certificate, no claim. It's worth repeating because it catches people out every January.

The headline reliefs are generous, which is the whole point of the schemes. Under SEIS you get income tax relief at 50% of what you invest, on up to £200,000 a tax year. Under EIS the rate is 30%, on up to £1,000,000 a year - or up to £2,000,000 if at least £1,000,000 of it goes into knowledge-intensive companies. Both schemes let you carry the relief back to the previous tax year, which matters when last year's income tax bill was the bigger one. And both require you to hold the shares for a minimum of three years; sell early and the relief is clawed back.

On the return itself, the claim goes in the "Other tax reliefs" section of the additional information pages (form SA101), or the equivalent screen if you file online. You enter the company name, the amount subscribed, the date of issue, and the reference from the certificate. If you're carrying relief back, you say so on the same claim and state the amount. HMRC's own helpsheets - HS393 for SEIS and HS297 for EIS - walk through the exact entries.

The relief is generous, but it's not automatic. HMRC won't chase you to claim it.

One point of order that trips up first-timers: the certificate usually arrives months after you invest, because the company can't apply for the authority to issue it until it has been trading for a while or has spent most of the round. Invest in January, still waiting in the autumn - that's normal, not a warning sign. You have a long window to claim: up to five years after the 31 January following the tax year of the share issue.

VCTs report a little differently

If part of your early-stage exposure runs through a Venture Capital Trust - a listed fund that invests in qualifying small companies - the reporting shape changes. You claim income tax relief at 20% on what you subscribe, up to £200,000 a tax year, again through Self Assessment. The catch is a longer leash: you must hold the VCT shares for at least five years for that relief to stick.

The upside is that VCTs are light on ongoing reporting. Dividends from a qualifying VCT, within the annual limit, are tax-free, so there's nothing to declare on them. Gains on VCT shares are free of capital gains tax too. The one thing to know going in: there is no loss relief on a VCT, unlike SEIS and EIS. HMRC's HS298 helpsheet covers the detail.

Capital gains, deferral and exemption

Gains are the other half of what HMRC wants to see. If you sell shares and the total gain for the year is above the annual exempt amount, it goes on the capital gains pages of your return. But the venture schemes carry valuable wrinkles here.

Shares held under SEIS or EIS for three or more years are exempt from capital gains tax on disposal, provided you received income tax relief and it hasn't been withdrawn. SEIS also offers reinvestment relief: you can exempt 50% of a gain you reinvest into SEIS shares, on up to £100,000 of investment a year. EIS instead offers deferral relief, letting you postpone an existing gain by rolling it into qualifying EIS shares - the gain comes back into charge later rather than disappearing. These are reported through the same capital gains pages, with the relevant boxes flagged.

When a company fails: loss relief

Early-stage portfolios lose money on individual names - that's the arithmetic of the asset class. When a SEIS or EIS company goes under, loss relief can take some of the sting out, and it's claimed on the same return. The loss is calculated net of the income tax relief you already had, and you can usually set it against either income or capital gains, depending on what works for your position. Again, VCTs are the exception - no loss relief there.

A note on the company's side of the line

Worth keeping straight: the reliefs you claim depend on the company having qualified, but the company's eligibility tests are its problem, settled before you invest. For context, an EIS company generally must have gross assets no greater than £30 million before the share issue (and no more than £35 million immediately after), fewer than 250 full-time-equivalent employees, be within seven years of its first commercial sale, and stay within annual and lifetime raise limits - currently £10 million a year and £24 million over its life, with higher ceilings for knowledge-intensive companies. These figures are set by HMRC and have moved over time, so check the current gov.uk EIS guidance rather than relying on memory. By the time a certificate reaches you, that work is done - your job is the return.

The dates that actually bite

Three to commit to memory. 5 October after the tax year ends: the deadline to register for Self Assessment if you're new to it. 31 October: the deadline if - unusually - you still file on paper. 31 January: the deadline to file online and to pay any tax due. Miss the filing date and there's an automatic £100 penalty even if you owe nothing; miss the payment date and interest starts running. The reliefs are worth real money, but none of it helps if the return is late.

That's the shape of it. Keep your SEIS3s and EIS3s somewhere you can find them, log your gains and losses as they happen rather than reconstructing the year every January, and the return becomes data-entry rather than archaeology. And to say it plainly: this is general editorial information, not financial or tax advice. The reliefs are valuable but the rules have sharp edges, and a wrong claim is your liability. Run anything material past an accountant or an FCA-regulated adviser before you file.

Subscribe

Get The Carry every Wednesday.

Free. One email a week. About six minutes. Read by 60+ active UK angel investors.

Free · 6-minute read · Every Wednesday

One-click unsubscribe. We never sell subscriber data.

Frequently asked questions

Do I have to file a Self Assessment return just because I made an angel investment?

Not automatically, but in practice you almost always will. You only need to file if you have tax to report or relief to claim. Claiming SEIS, EIS or VCT income tax relief, reporting a capital gain above the annual exempt amount, or claiming loss relief all require a Self Assessment return. If you have none of those, the investment alone does not create a filing duty - but most active angels end up filing for one of those reasons.

Can I claim SEIS or EIS relief without the certificate from the company?

No. You cannot claim income tax relief until the company has sent you a SEIS3 (for the Seed scheme) or EIS3 (for EIS) compliance certificate. It confirms HMRC has authorised the company to certify the shares as qualifying and carries the unique investment reference you enter on your return. If you have invested but hold no certificate, chase the company before you file.

How long do I have to claim SEIS or EIS income tax relief?

Up to five years after the 31 January following the tax year in which the shares were issued. Most angels claim through the return for the year of investment, or carry the relief back to the previous tax year. The five-year window is a backstop, not a reason to wait - claim once the certificate arrives.

Do I need to report VCT dividends to HMRC?

Dividends on shares in a qualifying Venture Capital Trust, within the annual limit, are tax-free, so there is no income tax to report on them. You do, however, claim the 20% income tax relief on the original subscription through Self Assessment, and the VCT must be held for at least five years for that relief to stick. Gains on VCT shares are also free of capital gains tax.

What happens at tax time if I sell qualifying shares too early?

If you dispose of SEIS or EIS shares before the three-year minimum holding period ends (five years for a VCT), or the company loses its qualifying status, the income tax relief is withdrawn or reduced. You must tell HMRC, normally through your tax return, and repay some or all of the relief. Any capital gains exemption on those shares is also lost.

Before you go

Notes from the UK cap table, every Wednesday.

The dealflow, the policy and the tax detail that moves the numbers - free, in about six minutes.

Free · 6-minute read · Every Wednesday

One-click unsubscribe. We never sell subscriber data.

Share

More from The Carry

Related reads.

All Essentials →