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UK Startups and Innovation
7JUN

VCT tax relief cut to 20% for first time

3 min read
10:09UTC

The first reduction in VCT income tax relief since the scheme's creation in 1995 took effect on 6 April. The government says investors will migrate to EIS; the assumption is untested.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

The first VCT relief cut in 31 years reduces institutional early-stage capital with no proven replacement.

HM Treasury cut VCT income tax relief from 30% to 20% on 6 April 2026, the first reduction since Venture Capital Trusts were created in 1995 1. Simultaneously, the Enterprise Investment Scheme (EIS) lifetime company limit was doubled to £24m, and the annual company investment cap rose to £10m. The government projects the combined package unlocks approximately £100m of additional investment per year.

VCTs are the primary institutional vehicle for pooled early-stage investment. Angels use EIS (which retains 30% relief), but VCTs channel capital from retail investors into portfolios of small companies. The government argues investors will migrate from VCTs to EIS. That may hold for individual angel-backed rounds, but VCTs raised approximately £1bn in 2024-25. A 10 percentage point relief cut implies a contraction in new VCT fundraising that structurally smaller EIS angel rounds cannot fully offset.

The timing compounds the effect. Beauhurst data shows UK grant awards at their lowest count since 2016. VCT-funded early stages are the hardest to replace with alternative capital. For a pre-seed spinout needing £80,000 to prove a concept, the pipeline of institutional early-stage money just narrowed at the same moment the government is deploying billions at growth stage.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A Venture Capital Trust (VCT) is a type of investment fund that pools money from ordinary savers and invests it in small, early-stage British companies. To encourage people to invest, the government gave a 30% tax break: invest £10,000, get £3,000 back from HMRC. From April 2026, that tax break dropped to 20%. This matters because VCTs are one of the main ways small British companies raise their first significant investment. If fewer people put money into VCTs (because the tax incentive is less attractive), fewer small companies can raise the early funding they need to get started. The government argues investors will switch to a similar scheme called EIS (Enterprise Investment Scheme), which still offers 30% relief. Critics say EIS and VCTs serve different functions and one cannot simply replace the other.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The VCT relief cut reflects a Treasury decision that the 30% rate, introduced in 1995 at a time when venture capital was a niche activity, now over-subsidises an asset class that has matured sufficiently to compete for retail capital on its own merits.

The structural tension is that VCTs serve a dual function: they provide early-stage company finance (a market-failure correction) and tax-efficient retirement savings vehicles for higher-rate taxpayers (a general saving incentive). The Treasury's cut implicitly judges that the savings function has become dominant and the investment subsidy rate should reflect that.

A secondary cause is Whitehall coordination failure. The VCT cut (Treasury decision) was made independently of the Innovate UK restructuring (DSIT decision) and the Sovereign AI Unit launch (also DSIT). No single department owns the seed-to-Series-A funding pipeline, so Treasury optimises for fiscal efficiency while DSIT deploys growth capital, and the two policies pull in opposite directions at different stages of the same companies.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    VCT fundraising may fall 25-35% in 2026-27 tax year, reducing seed-stage capital supply by £250-330m annually if the 2004 precedent holds.

    Short term · 0.65
  • Risk

    The combination of lower VCT fundraising and declining grant counts creates a structural gap in £250k-£2m funding at exactly the stage where most UK university spinouts need capital.

    Medium term · 0.7
  • Opportunity

    The EIS lifetime limit increase to £24m enables more capital per company from high-net-worth angels, which may partially compensate for VCT contraction in well-networked London-based startups.

    Short term · 0.6
First Reported In

Update #1 · State capital floods in, seed money drains

HM Treasury / HMRC· 13 Apr 2026
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