Running a Limited Company in the UK: Setup, Tax and Director Essentials

How Much Does a Limited Company Accountant Cost UK? 2026/27

How much does a limited company accountant cost in the UK in 2026/27? We compare monthly and annual fees, what's included, and how to choose the right accountant for your company.

Self-employment tax and business information is based on current HMRC rules. This is not tax or accounting advice. Consider consulting a qualified accountant for your specific circumstances.

Accountant fees are the biggest single running cost for most one-person limited companies. Knowing what a fair price looks like — and what should be included — helps you avoid overpaying and ensures you’re not left with hidden charges.

What Does a Limited Company Accountant Do?

A good contractor/company accountant typically handles:

Task Frequency Included in most packages?
Year-end statutory accounts Annual Yes
Companies House filing Annual Yes
Corporation Tax return (CT600) Annual Yes
Monthly payroll (RTI) Monthly Yes — most packages
Dividend vouchers and board minutes As needed Yes — most packages
VAT returns Quarterly Often — check package
Director self-assessment return Annual Sometimes — check
Companies House confirmation statement Annual Sometimes — check
IR35 contract review Per contract Usually charged separately
Bookkeeping Ongoing Usually charged separately

How Much Should You Pay? — Fee Ranges 2026/27

Service level Annual cost Monthly equiv Who it suits
Basic (accounts + CT only) £800–£1,200 £67–£100 Dormant or minimal trading companies
Standard (accounts + CT + payroll) £1,200–£1,800 £100–£150 Active company, director handles SA return
Full service (all of the above + SA) £1,800–£2,800 £150–£233 Most one-person contractors
Premium (complex/property/multi-director) £2,800–£5,000+ £233–£417+ Multiple shareholders, IR35 complexity

Most straightforward contractor companies should budget £1,800–£2,400/year.

Online Contractor Accountants — Price Comparison

Several specialist online accountants serve UK contractors with fixed monthly fees:

Provider Monthly fee Annual cost Key features
Crunch £149–£199/month £1,788–£2,388 Includes software, SA, payroll
Gorilla Accounting £95–£150/month £1,140–£1,800 FreeAgent included, SA included
Inniaccounts £89–£139/month £1,068–£1,668 Contractor-focused, SA included
SJD Accountancy £130–£185/month £1,560–£2,220 Large firm, dedicated accountant
Brookson £140–£200/month £1,680–£2,400 IR35 services included
The Accountancy Partnership £90–£150/month £1,080–£1,800 Fixed-price, wide service coverage

Prices approximate — always confirm current rates directly.

What’s Often Charged Separately

Watch out for costs that aren’t included in the advertised package price:

Extra Typical add-on cost
Director’s self-assessment tax return £150–£400/year (if not included)
VAT registration and returns £200–£600/year (if not included)
IR35 contract review £150–£400 per contract
Company formation £100–£200 (one-off)
Additional directors (payroll) £50–£150/year per director
Bookkeeping support £50–£150/month
Reference letter or mortgage reference £50–£150 one-off

Self-assessment is the most common hidden extra. Many cheap packages advertise a low monthly price but exclude the director’s personal tax return — which adds £200–£400/year. Always confirm this is included.

Software — What You’ll Use Day to Day

Most accountants include access to cloud accounting software in their package:

Software What it does Typical cost (if separate)
FreeAgent Invoicing, expenses, payroll, VAT £19/month (free with Mettle or NatWest Business)
Xero Full accounting platform £16–£47/month
QuickBooks Accounting, VAT, payroll £15–£45/month
Sage Business Cloud Full accounting £15–£40/month

If your accountant includes FreeAgent or Xero in the package, that’s genuine value — the software alone costs £200–£500/year.

How to Choose the Right Accountant

Questions to ask before signing up:

  1. Is the director’s self-assessment return included?
  2. Are VAT returns included (if I’m VAT registered)?
  3. Is payroll (RTI submissions) included?
  4. What software do you use and do I have access?
  5. Do I get a named accountant or a team?
  6. What are your IR35 review fees per contract?
  7. What notice period is required to leave?

Red flags:

  • Very low monthly fee (under £80/month) with no clear explanation of what’s excluded
  • No dedicated accountant — only a ticketing system
  • Long contract lock-ins (over 12 months) with no performance guarantee
  • No experience with your specific industry or IR35

The Value Calculation

An accountant’s job is to ensure you pay the correct tax — no more, no less. For a contractor earning £80,000/year, a good accountant advising on optimal salary/dividend mix can save:

Tax saving from good advice Annual value
Salary at optimal NI threshold (£9,100) vs higher salary £2,000–£4,000
Pension contributions via company (employer contributions) £1,000–£5,000+ depending on amount
VAT Flat Rate Scheme benefit (if applicable) £1,000–£3,000
Total potential saving vs DIY £4,000–£12,000+

Against an accountant cost of £2,000–£2,500/year, this is an obvious net positive.

Sources

  1. HMRC — Running a limited company
  2. Companies House — File your accounts