Savings & Investing
Venture Capital Trusts (VCTs) Guide UK — Tax Relief and Risks
How VCTs work, the generous tax reliefs they offer, who they're suitable for, and the risks of investing in UK venture capital trusts.
Venture Capital Trusts (VCTs) offer some of the most generous tax reliefs available to UK investors — but they come with significant risk. This guide explains how they work, who they suit, and what to watch out for.
How VCTs Work
| Feature |
Detail |
| What they invest in |
Small, early-stage UK companies |
| Structure |
Listed on the London Stock Exchange |
| Minimum holding period |
5 years to keep income tax relief |
| Typical minimum investment |
£2,000–£5,000 |
| Maximum investment for tax relief |
£200,000 per tax year |
| Manager |
Professional fund manager selects and manages investments |
VCT Tax Reliefs
| Tax relief |
Detail |
| 30% income tax relief |
Invest £10,000 → get £3,000 off your income tax bill |
| Tax-free dividends |
All dividends from VCTs are exempt from income tax |
| No Capital Gains Tax |
No CGT on profits when you sell VCT shares |
| Loss relief |
If the VCT’s share price falls, your loss (after the 30% relief) can be offset against income |
Example: £20,000 VCT Investment
| Element |
Amount |
| Investment |
£20,000 |
| 30% income tax relief |
-£6,000 |
| Effective net cost |
£14,000 |
| Annual tax-free dividends (e.g. 5%) |
£1,000/year |
| If sold after 5+ years at same price |
£20,000 (no CGT) |
Conditions for Tax Relief
| Condition |
Requirement |
| New shares only |
Tax relief only on newly issued VCT shares (not second-hand on stock market) |
| Hold for 5 years |
Selling before 5 years = clawback of 30% income tax relief |
| Must have income tax to offset |
Relief reduces your tax bill — can’t create a refund below £0 |
| UK taxpayer |
Must be UK tax resident |
| £200,000 annual limit |
Maximum investment qualifying for income tax relief |
Who Are VCTs Suitable For?
| Suitable for |
Not suitable for |
| Higher and additional rate taxpayers |
Non-taxpayers (no tax to offset) |
| Experienced investors |
Investment beginners |
| Those who can lock up money for 5+ years |
Anyone needing quick access |
| Those who accept high risk |
Risk-averse investors |
| People looking to diversify beyond mainstream investments |
Those without a solid core portfolio already |
| Investors who’ve maxed ISA and pension contributions |
Anyone who hasn’t used ISA/pension allowances yet |
Types of VCT
| Type |
Strategy |
Risk level |
Typical returns |
| Generalist |
Mix of sectors and stages |
Medium–high |
Moderate dividends |
| AIM VCT |
Invests in AIM-listed companies |
Medium |
Variable |
| Specialist |
Focused on one sector (e.g. tech, healthcare) |
High |
Higher potential but concentrated risk |
VCT Risks
| Risk |
Detail |
| Company failure |
Small companies fail frequently — some or all underlying investments may lose value |
| Illiquidity |
VCT shares trade on the stock exchange but with limited buyers — you may struggle to sell at a fair price |
| Discounts to NAV |
VCT shares often trade at 5%–15% below their net asset value |
| Tax rule changes |
Government could reduce or remove VCT tax reliefs |
| Fees |
Annual management fees of 1.5%–2.5% plus performance fees |
| 5-year lock-in |
Practical minimum holding — selling early triggers clawback |
VCT Fees
| Fee type |
Typical range |
| Initial charge |
0%–5% (often reduced via promotions) |
| Annual management charge (AMC) |
1.5%–2.5% |
| Performance fee |
0%–20% of gains above a hurdle |
| Running costs (OCF) |
2%–3% all-in |
Fees are higher than mainstream funds. The tax relief offsets this to some extent, but it’s worth comparing VCT managers carefully.
VCTs vs EIS vs SEIS
| Feature |
VCT |
EIS |
SEIS |
| Income tax relief |
30% |
30% |
50% |
| Annual limit |
£200,000 |
£1m (£2m for knowledge-intensive) |
£200,000 |
| CGT exemption |
Yes |
Yes (if held 3 years) |
Yes (if held 3 years) |
| Loss relief |
Yes |
Yes (very generous) |
Yes |
| Minimum hold |
5 years |
3 years |
3 years |
| Diversification |
Managed portfolio |
Single company |
Single company |
| CGT deferral |
No |
Yes |
No (but CGT reinvestment relief) |
| Risk level |
High (diversified) |
Very high (single company) |
Extremely high |
How to Invest in VCTs
- Check you’re eligible — UK taxpayer with sufficient income tax liability
- Ensure you’ve used ISA and pension allowances first — these are lower risk
- Research VCT managers — look at track record, portfolio, fees
- Apply during a new share offer — tax relief only applies to new shares
- Hold for at least 5 years — to keep the income tax relief
Popular VCT Managers
| Manager |
Notable VCTs |
Focus |
| Octopus |
Octopus Titan VCT |
Technology |
| Mobeus |
Mobeus Income & Growth VCTs |
Generalist |
| Maven |
Maven Income and Growth VCT |
Generalist / AIM |
| Baronsmead |
Baronsmead Venture Trust |
Generalist |
| Northern |
Northern VCTs |
Generalist |
| ProVen |
ProVen Growth & Income VCT |
Growth |
Summary
| Point |
Detail |
| Tax relief |
Excellent — 30% income tax, tax-free dividends, no CGT |
| Risk |
High — investing in small, unproven companies |
| Minimum hold |
5 years |
| Best for |
Higher rate taxpayers with money they can lock away |
| Not for |
Beginners, those needing access, non-taxpayers |
| Use ISA and pension first |
VCTs are for supplementary tax-efficient investing |
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