Employment Allowance: Connected Companies Rules

May 13, 2026 admin No comments exist
Sterling currency in background with the words Employment Allowance and Connected Companies.

If you operate more than one limited company, you need to be careful with the Employment Allowance.

HMRC regularly recovers claims where employers didn’t realise their companies were connected. These errors are costly, avoidable, and rarely spotted until after the allowance has already been used.


The Employment Allowance in brief

Employment Allowance allows eligible employers to reduce their employer’s Class 1 National Insurance liability.

From 6 April 2025, it is:

  • Worth up to £10,500 per tax year
  • Available to more employers following the removal of the £100,000 NIC cap
  • Still limited to one claim for connected companies

That last point has not changed – and it’s where most mistakes are made.

HMRC’s full guidance is here:
Connected companies and Employment Allowance – GOV.UK


Connected companies: HMRC’s view

For Employment Allowance purposes, companies are connected if either:

  • One company controls another, or
  • The same person (or people) controls more than one company

Control is not just about shareholding.

HMRC will consider:

  • Majority voting rights or share capital
  • Rights to income or assets
  • Control through associates (including spouses and close family)
  • Whether the companies are financially, economically, or organisationally linked

If the same individual or family effectively runs multiple companies, HMRC is likely to regard them as connected.


The rule that determines everything: 6 April

HMRC looks at one date only.

If two or more companies are connected at the start of the tax year (6 April):

  • They are treated as connected for the entire tax year
  • Only one company may claim the Employment Allowance
  • The allowance cannot be split

It does not matter if:

  • The companies separate later in the year
  • Ownership changes after 6 April

The position at the start of the tax year is decisive.


Choosing which company claims

HMRC does not decide which company gets the allowance.

Where companies are connected:

  • The businesses must agree between themselves which company will claim
  • Only one PAYE scheme can apply the allowance
  • Any unused allowance is lost – it cannot be transferred to another company

Choosing the wrong company can result in part of the £10,500 being wasted.


Companies becoming connected later

This often works in the employer’s favour.

If companies:

  • Are not connected on 6 April
  • Become connected later in the tax year

Each company may still keep its Employment Allowance claim for that year.
The restriction applies from the next tax year onward.


Why HMRC challenges these claims

Incorrect Employment Allowance claims are a common PAYE compliance issue.

HMRC may:

  • Recover the allowance in full
  • Charge interest
  • Apply penalties in some cases

Most errors arise from misunderstanding the connected companies rules, not deliberate misuse – but HMRC treats the outcome the same.


What you should be doing now

If you:

  • Own or control more than one limited company
  • Have family members involved across businesses
  • Operate multiple PAYE schemes

You should review connected company status every tax year before claiming Employment Allowance.

This avoids:

  • HMRC corrections
  • Unexpected repayments
  • Unnecessary disruption later

The bottom line

Multiple companies do not mean multiple Employment Allowances.

The allowance is valuable – but only if claimed correctly.
Getting it wrong is expensive, and HMRC will not view it as a minor technical issue.


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