As we approach the Autumn 2025 Budget announcement, it’s worth recapping the key changes to Employee Ownership Trusts (EOTs) introduced in the October 2024 Budget. These reforms tightened the framework, making governance, independence, and valuation discipline more important than ever. HMRC now expects every EOT transaction to demonstrate substance and compliance – not just rely on tax reliefs.
Key Changes:
- Control Restrictions – Former owners (and those connected with them) can no longer retain indirect or direct control post-sale. A true EOT must have independent governance. Examples include: Appointing at least one independent trustee with no prior connection to the business. Ensuring employee representatives sit on the trustee board. Establishing clear governance processes, such as independent approval of key trustee decisions. These steps demonstrate that the EOT is genuinely run in the employees’ interests, not as an extension of the former owner’s control.
- Trustee Independence & UK Residency – Trustees must now be UK-resident at the time of sale, ensuring the trust remains within HMRC’s jurisdiction. This prevents situations where offshore trustees could create uncertainty about tax oversight or enforcement. In addition, more than half of trustees cannot be “excluded participators” or connected parties, reinforcing independence.
- Fair Value & Reasonable Financing – Trustees are required to take all reasonable steps to ensure the purchase price does not exceed fair market value and that any interest on deferred consideration reflects a reasonable commercial rate. In practice, this may mean: obtaining an independent valuation of the business (or even a second opinion if the deal is material), documenting the rationale in trustee minutes so that HMRC can see the process was diligent.
- Extended Clawback Period – HMRC may withdraw CGT relief not just in the following year, but for up to four tax years post-disposal, should a “disqualifying event” occur. This makes ongoing compliance and governance even more critical.
- Tax-Free Treatment of Company Contributions – Previously, there was uncertainty about whether contributions a company makes to its EOT (for example, to fund the initial acquisition price or trustee running costs) could be treated as distributions – which would have created an unexpected income tax charge for employees. The new rules confirm that these contributions are not taxable distributions -it doesn’t trigger income tax.
- Bonus Flexibility – The rules around tax-free bonuses are now more flexible, allowing directors to be excluded from discretionary awards – helping align incentives toward broader employee benefit.
Why These Changes Matter
The reforms ensure EOTs serve their intended purpose – supporting genuine employee ownership rather than acting as aggressive tax shelters. They reinforce governance, valuation discipline, and longer-term commitment – valuable foundations for both sellers and employees.
What’s Still in Place
- 100% CGT relief on qualifying disposals to EOTs continues – assuming all conditions are met.
- The EOT model remains tax-efficient and attractive, especially as alternative exit routes become more challenging under new inheritance tax thresholds from 2026.
Final Word
The revisions introduced in the October 2024 Budget were not just technical tightening – they signalled HMRC’s intent to safeguard the integrity of the EOT model. A successful EOT transaction today isn’t just about tax relief – it’s about structure, evidence, governance, and credibility.
Getting it right ensures a smooth handover, protects CGT relief, and sustains the culture and purpose of the business. That’s why rigorous valuation and governance matter now more than ever.
Thinking about an EOT? Get expert guidance first. Email Partner Geoff Pinder to discuss your options.