2 min read
Definition
Dividend tax is the income tax an individual pays on dividends received above the tax-free dividend allowance, at rates that are lower than those on salary and carry no National Insurance.
In plain terms
When you take money out of your company as dividends, you pay tax on it personally — but at gentler rates than a wage, and with no NI. That is why a salary-plus-dividend mix is often efficient.
Why it matters for your company
Dividend tax is the personal cost of extracting profit, on top of the corporation tax the company already paid on that profit. Budgeting for it — usually via Self Assessment — is essential when planning how you pay yourself.
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Read →Funding for UK limited companies
Credicorp lends to your company, not to you personally — short-term working capital with no personal guarantee. See what your business could access.