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How to Set Up a Company in the UK as a Foreigner (2026)

A UK Ltd can be registered in 24 hours online from anywhere in the world, with no minimum capital, no residency requirement, and a £12 government fee. The real work is banking and accounting — but ...

March 2026 8 min read
How to Set Up a Company in the UK as a Foreigner (2026)

Why the UK is the world's most accessible company jurisdiction

The United Kingdom operates what is arguably the most foreigner-friendly company formation system in the world. There is no requirement to be a UK resident, no minimum share capital, no mandatory local director, and no notarisation. You can incorporate from Dubai, Lagos, or Seoul with a laptop and a passport scan. Companies House — the UK company registry — processes most applications within 24 hours.

UK corporation tax is 25% on profits above £250,000 (19% on profits up to £50,000, with marginal relief between). That's not the lowest rate globally, but the UK Ltd's international credibility, English-language legal system, massive treaty network (130+ double tax treaties), and banking accessibility make it the default choice for many international founders who aren't prepared to physically relocate.

This is what the process actually looks like.

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Step 1: Choose your company name

  • Your company name must:
  • Be unique (check the Companies House name availability checker at find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk)
  • End in "Limited" or "Ltd" (private limited company)
  • Not be "same as" an existing registered name (Companies House applies a similarity test)
  • Not contain "sensitive words" without approval (words like "Royal," "Bank," "Institute," etc.)

Practical note: Common names are often taken. Have 2–3 alternatives ready. Adding Ltd at the end of a one-word name (e.g., "Nexus Ltd") is almost always unavailable. A distinctive two-word name (e.g., "Marlowe Digital Ltd") is more likely to clear.

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Step 2: Decide on your structure

  • A standard UK Ltd for a single founder typically has:
  • 1 director (you) — directors are publicly listed at Companies House
  • 1 shareholder (you) — holding 100% of shares — shareholders are publicly listed
  • Share capital: 1 ordinary share at £1 nominal value (your total investment is £1 — this is formality, not actual capitalisation)
  • SIC code: A Standard Industrial Classification code describing your business activity; pick the closest match at ons.gov.uk/methodology/classificationsandstandards/ukstandardindustrialclassificationofeconomicactivities

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Step 3: Get a registered address

Every UK company must have a registered office address in the UK. This address is public and is where legal documents (including HMRC correspondence, Companies House notices) are formally received.

  • Options:
  • Use your home address: Free, but your home address becomes publicly visible at Companies House permanently (even after the company is dissolved). Not recommended for privacy reasons.
  • Registered address service: £50–150/year. Widely available from company formation agents and accountants. You get a London (or other UK city) address that appears on Companies House without revealing your personal address.
  • Your accountant's address: Many UK accountants offer this as part of their service. Tidiest arrangement.

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Step 4: Incorporate via Companies House

  • Option A — Direct via Companies House Web Incorporation Service (simplest):
  • Go to start.companieshouse.gov.uk
  • Create a Government Gateway account if you don't have one
  • Complete the online incorporation form (company name, registered address, director details, shareholder details, share structure)
  • Pay £12 (online) or £40 (paper)
  • Receive confirmation of incorporation within 24 hours (usually same day for online applications filed during business hours)
  • Option B — Via a company formation agent:
  • Services like Companies Made Simple, 1st Formations, Rapid Formations
  • Cost: £15–50 including their service fee and Companies House fee
  • Some offer packages including registered address and bank account referrals
  • Useful if you want a slightly more guided process
  • What you receive:
  • Certificate of Incorporation (digital PDF — fully legally valid)
  • Memorandum and Articles of Association (standard Articles are used by default — Model Articles are sufficient for most founders)
  • Company registration number (CRN) — a unique 8-digit number that identifies your company in all dealings with Companies House and HMRC

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Step 5: Register for Corporation Tax

Within 3 months of starting to trade, you must notify HMRC that your company is active and register for Corporation Tax. This is done online at gov.uk/limited-company-formation/set-up-hmrc-payroll-and-corporation-tax.

You will need your UTR (Unique Taxpayer Reference) — HMRC sends this to your registered address within 14 days of incorporation. Allow for postal delays.

VAT registration: Not required until your UK-source taxable turnover exceeds £90,000 in a 12-month rolling period. You can register voluntarily before this threshold if it's commercially beneficial (e.g., you have significant VAT-able UK costs to reclaim).

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Step 6: Open a business bank account

This is where most international founders hit friction. Traditional UK banks (Barclays, Lloyds, HSBC, NatWest, Santander) routinely decline applications from companies with non-UK-resident directors and shareholders. They are not legally required to explain why.

What works reliably for non-residents:

ProviderTypeSpeedMonthly fee
Wise BusinessE-money institution1–5 days, fully onlineFree (transaction fees apply)
Revolut BusinessE-money institution1–5 days, fully onlineFree plan available; paid from £19/mo
Cashplus BusinessUK bank3–10 days, onlineFrom £9.95/mo
TideUK bank (banking via ClearBank)3–10 daysFree plan available

Recommended approach: Open Wise Business first — it provides a UK sort code and account number that works for all client payments and BACS transfers. Once you have 6–12 months of trading history, apply to Starling Business or a traditional bank if you need fuller banking services.

  • What Wise Business gives you:
  • UK sort code and account number (receive GBP payments from UK clients)
  • EU IBAN (receive EUR payments)
  • US routing and account number (receive USD payments)
  • Debit card for business expenses
  • Integration with Xero and QuickBooks

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Step 7: Get accounting set up

  • A UK Ltd has ongoing annual filing obligations:
  • Confirmation Statement: Filed annually (by the anniversary of incorporation); £34
  • Annual accounts: Due 9 months after your financial year end; filed at Companies House (publicly visible)
  • Corporation Tax return: Due 12 months after end of accounting period
  • Corporation Tax payment: Due 9 months and 1 day after end of accounting period

Finding an accountant: Look for a UK-based accountant with experience in non-resident-owned companies. Budget £500–1,500/year for a straightforward service business. Services like Crunch, FreeAgent (integrated accounting + accountant), or a local practice are all options.

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Real cost of a UK Ltd (Year 1)

ItemCost
Companies House registration£12
Registered address service£60–150
Wise Business (banking)£0
Accountant (accounts + CT return)£600–1,500
Confirmation Statement£34
**Total****£706–1,696**

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Taxes you'll actually pay

Corporation Tax: 19% on profits up to £50,000 (small profits rate); 25% on profits above £250,000; marginal relief calculated on profits between £50,000–£250,000.

  • Dividends: If you take money from the company as dividends (the typical approach for sole director/shareholder), dividend tax applies at the personal level:
  • Dividend allowance: £500/year tax-free
  • Basic rate band: 8.75%
  • Higher rate: 33.75%
  • Additional rate: 39.35%

Salary (if you pay yourself a salary): Subject to Income Tax and National Insurance. Most founder-directors run a low salary (up to the NI threshold, typically £12,570/year) and take the remainder as dividends to minimise NICs.

IMPORTANT: If you are not UK tax-resident, UK Income Tax on dividends depends on your home country's rules and the UK's double tax treaty with it. Many treaties exempt non-UK-resident shareholders from UK dividend withholding tax (the UK domestic WHT rate on dividends is 0% for individuals — dividends are paid gross). Your home country will then tax them per their own rules.

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Common mistakes when setting up a UK Ltd as a foreigner

Mistake 1: Thinking the UK Ltd makes you UK tax-resident It doesn't. Company incorporation and personal tax residency are separate. Your UK Ltd pays UK Corporation Tax. You personally pay tax where you are tax-resident.

Mistake 2: Using your home address as the registered office Your address becomes permanently public at Companies House. Use a registered address service.

Mistake 3: Ignoring Companies House filing deadlines Annual accounts filed more than 3 months late: £750 penalty (first time); £1,500 if late again within 3 years. Late Confirmation Statements: potential prosecution. Set calendar reminders.

Mistake 4: Not keeping business and personal finances separate Open the business account before you start transacting. Never use a personal account for company income or expenses — it creates accounting nightmares and can undermine limited liability in extreme cases.

Mistake 5: Assuming a UK company means UK banking is easy It isn't. Use Wise or Revolut while you build trading history.

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Who should set up a UK Ltd

✅ Digital service businesses selling to UK or European clients ✅ Founders who want maximum international credibility at minimum cost ✅ Non-residents who don't want to or can't relocate ✅ Anyone needing an EU-adjacent company post-Brexit (though NL, IE are better for EU market access) ✅ Freelancers and consultants at any revenue level above ~£25K/year

❌ Those wanting the lowest possible tax rate (consider Georgia, Estonia, Cyprus) ❌ Those needing a company their UAE bank will recognise as local (use a UAE free zone) ❌ Founders planning to raise US institutional VC (use Delaware C Corp)

Related Guide

Read the complete formation guide for this country — structures, costs, taxes, banking, and visas.

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This content is educational and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Always consult a qualified professional for your specific situation. Data last verified March 2026.