Enterprise Management Incentives (EMI) reform took effect on 6 April 2026. The gross-assets test rose from £30m to £120m, the employee limit doubled from 250 to 500, and the share-option pool doubled from £3m to £6m. Lifetime company investment limits under EIS and VCT were also doubled to £24m. HM Treasury estimates the package unlocks roughly £100m a year across around 1,800 UK scaleups, equivalent to about 70,000 employees who can now receive tax-advantaged share options their employer's size previously excluded. 1
EMI lets qualifying small companies grant employees share options on which capital gains tax is charged at entrepreneurs' rates rather than as income, delivering materially higher net proceeds than cash bonuses for comparable employer cost. The old £30m gross-assets limit was the binding ceiling: scaleups breaching it had to drop EMI, typically at Series B or C, and replace it with non-tax-advantaged schemes. The new £120m ceiling lets a 400-person company at a £100m valuation keep offering tax-advantaged options through its growth phase; that was the policy intent.
The reform landed alongside the VCT relief cut . Read together, the two moves redistribute tax incentive away from pooled retail risk capital and toward direct scaleup employee compensation. That is coherent for companies of 250-500 staff raising above £5m; it does nothing for pre-revenue founders looking for a £500,000 cheque. The British Business Bank's direct mandate starts at £5m, and the UK grant-award picture continues to consolidate into fewer, bigger cheques.
CFOs at 250-500-headcount scaleups can reset option schemes at the next board meeting under the new £120m ceiling. Pre-Series-A founders see no change: the reform touches nothing in the capital environment below £5m. The policy machinery still has a visible gap between £250k and £2m, and none of the 6 April instruments reaches it.
