Umbrella Company vs Limited Company: Which is Right for You in 2026?
Choosing between an umbrella company and a limited company is one of the most important financial decisions a UK contractor can make. The right choice depends on your IR35 status, earnings, contract length, and appetite for admin. This comprehensive guide breaks down everything you need to know for the 2025/26 tax year.
Contents
What is an Umbrella Company?
An umbrella company acts as your employer when you work as a contractor. Instead of running your own company, the umbrella employs you and handles all payroll, tax deductions, National Insurance contributions, and pension auto-enrolment on your behalf. You submit your timesheets to the umbrella, they invoice the recruitment agency, and you receive a net salary after all statutory deductions and the umbrella’s margin.
The typical process works like this: your recruitment agency pays the umbrella company your gross assignment rate. The umbrella deducts employer’s National Insurance (13.8% above £9,100), the apprenticeship levy (0.5%), their weekly margin (typically £22-£30 per week), and then processes the remaining amount through PAYE. You receive a payslip showing income tax, employee NI, and any pension contributions deducted.
Crucially, as an umbrella employee, you gain employment rights including holiday pay (typically 12.07% rolled into your rate), statutory sick pay, pension auto-enrolment, and potentially parental leave. These are genuine employment rights because you have an employment contract with the umbrella.
What is a Limited Company?
A limited company (Ltd) is a separate legal entity that you set up and own as a director and shareholder. Your limited company contracts with agencies or directly with end clients. The company invoices for your services, receives the gross revenue, and you extract income through a combination of salary and dividends.
The key tax advantage of a limited company lies in the dividend route. Unlike salary, dividends are not subject to National Insurance contributions. In 2025/26, the dividend tax rates are 8.75% (basic rate), 33.75% (higher rate), and 39.38% (additional rate) — significantly lower than the combined income tax and NI on equivalent salary income. Most contractor accountants recommend paying yourself a small salary at the personal allowance level (£12,570) and taking the rest as dividends.
However, running a limited company comes with administrative responsibilities: filing annual accounts with Companies House, submitting corporation tax returns, managing VAT if registered, operating PAYE for your salary, and maintaining proper business records. Most contractors hire a specialist accountant for £100-£150 per month to handle these obligations.
Key Differences at a Glance
| Factor | Umbrella | Limited Company |
|---|---|---|
| Tax efficiency | Lower (PAYE rates) | Higher (salary + dividends) |
| Admin burden | None — umbrella handles everything | Moderate — accountant needed |
| Setup time | Same day | 1-3 days |
| Running costs | £22-£30/week margin | £100-150/month accountant |
| IR35 suitability | Ideal for inside IR35 | Ideal for outside IR35 |
| Employment rights | Yes (holiday, pension, sick pay) | No — you’re a director |
| Expense claims | Very limited since 2016 | Full business expenses |
| Professional image | Neutral | More professional/credible |
| Contract flexibility | Easy to switch | Company persists between contracts |
| Risk level | Low | IR35 investigation risk |
Tax Comparison: 2025/26 Rates
Let’s look at a concrete example. Assume a contractor earning £84,000 per year (£400/day, 210 working days). Here’s how the numbers compare:
Through an umbrella company: After employer NI (13.8% above £9,100), apprenticeship levy (0.5%), and a £25/week margin, the taxable salary comes to approximately £71,800. After income tax and employee NI, take-home is around £52,000-£54,000 per year.
Through a limited company (outside IR35): With a £12,570 salary (no income tax, minimal employer NI) and the rest taken as dividends after 19% corporation tax, the effective take-home is typically £62,000-£65,000 per year — around £8,000-£11,000 more than an umbrella.
The gap widens at higher earnings. At £120,000/year, the limited company advantage can be £15,000-£20,000+. This is primarily because dividends avoid National Insurance entirely, and the dividend tax rates are lower than income tax rates at equivalent bands.
💡 Use Our Calculator
Want exact figures for your situation? Use our free take-home pay calculator on the homepage. It uses the latest 2025/26 tax rates and shows you a side-by-side comparison.
Important 2025/26 tax rates: Personal allowance remains £12,570. Basic rate income tax is 20% (£12,571-£50,270). Higher rate is 40% (£50,271-£125,140). Employee NI is 8% (£12,570-£50,270) and 2% above that. The dividend allowance is £500.
How IR35 Affects Your Choice
IR35 is arguably the single biggest factor in your umbrella vs limited company decision. Since the off-payroll working rules were extended to the private sector in April 2021, medium and large clients must assess whether your working arrangement resembles employment (inside IR35) or genuine self-employment (outside IR35).
If you’re inside IR35: The tax advantages of a limited company largely disappear. You’ll be taxed on a “deemed payment” at PAYE rates anyway. Running a limited company inside IR35 means you still have the admin burden and accountancy fees but gain only a small 5% expense allowance. Most contractors inside IR35 are better off with an umbrella — it’s simpler, cheaper, and the tax outcome is almost identical.
If you’re outside IR35: A limited company becomes significantly more tax-efficient. You can pay yourself an optimal salary/dividend mix and claim legitimate business expenses (equipment, training, travel, insurance, etc.). The savings compared to an umbrella typically range from £5,000 to £20,000+ per year depending on your gross income.
If you’re unsure about your IR35 status: Many contractors maintain a limited company and use an umbrella for specific inside-IR35 contracts. Providers like Brookson One offer both solutions, making it easy to switch depending on the contract.
Pros and Cons
☂️ Umbrella Company Pros
- Zero admin — no accounts, no Companies House filings, no VAT returns
- Employment rights including holiday pay, sick pay, and pension
- Instant setup — can start working the same day
- No personal financial risk — the umbrella handles compliance
- Simple to understand — you receive a payslip like any employee
- Easy to switch between contracts and agencies
- Ideal if you’re new to contracting
☂️ Umbrella Company Cons
- Less tax-efficient — you pay full PAYE rates
- Weekly margin reduces your take-home (£1,100-£1,500/year)
- Very limited expense claims since 2016 SDC rules
- No control over how you’re taxed
- Employer NI and apprenticeship levy come from your gross pay
🏢 Limited Company Pros
- Most tax-efficient way to work (salary + dividends)
- Full business expense claims (equipment, travel, insurance, training)
- Professional credibility — some clients prefer contracting with Ltd companies
- Retain profits in the company for future use
- Pension contributions are a deductible business expense
- More control over your financial planning
🏢 Limited Company Cons
- Admin burden — annual accounts, corporation tax, VAT, PAYE
- Accountancy fees of £100-£150/month
- IR35 risk — if found inside IR35, you lose the tax benefits
- Personal liability as a company director
- No employment rights (no holiday pay, sick pay, etc.)
- More complex to wind down if you stop contracting
When to Choose an Umbrella Company
An umbrella company is typically the better choice when:
- You’re inside IR35 — the tax advantages of a limited company don’t apply
- You’re new to contracting — an umbrella lets you focus on your work, not paperwork
- You have short contracts — setting up and running a limited company isn’t worth it for a 3-month engagement
- You value simplicity — receive a payslip, pay your taxes, done
- You earn below £50,000/year — the tax savings of a limited company are minimal at lower incomes
- Your agency requires it — some agencies only work with umbrella companies for inside-IR35 roles
When to Choose a Limited Company
A limited company makes more sense when:
- You’re outside IR35 — you can take advantage of the salary/dividend mix
- You earn £50,000+ per year — the tax savings become substantial
- You have significant business expenses — equipment, travel, training, insurance
- You plan to contract long-term — the setup effort pays off over time
- You want to retain profits — for a pension, future investment, or tax planning
- You value professional credibility — some enterprise clients prefer working with limited companies
Can You Switch Between Both?
Absolutely — and many contractors do exactly this. It’s perfectly normal to run a limited company for outside-IR35 contracts and use an umbrella for inside-IR35 engagements. Some providers like Brookson One, Churchill Knight, and Parasol offer both umbrella and limited company services, making it seamless to switch.
You can even keep your limited company dormant (inactive with Companies House) during periods when you’re using an umbrella. This costs nothing except a minimal annual filing fee. When you get another outside-IR35 contract, you simply reactivate it.
The key is to plan ahead. If you think you’ll have a mix of inside and outside IR35 contracts, setting up a limited company from the start gives you maximum flexibility. You can always fall back to an umbrella when needed.
Conclusion
There’s no one-size-fits-all answer. The right choice depends on your specific circumstances:
☂️ Choose Umbrella If:
Inside IR35, new to contracting, short contracts, want zero admin, or earning under £50k.
🏢 Choose Ltd If:
Outside IR35, earning £50k+, long-term contracting, significant expenses, want tax efficiency.
Use our take-home pay calculator to see exact figures for your salary level and IR35 status. And if you’re still unsure, get free expert advice — we’ll connect you with a specialist who can review your specific situation.
Disclaimer: This article is for general information only and does not constitute financial or tax advice. Tax rates and thresholds are based on 2025/26 figures and may change. Always consult a qualified accountant for advice specific to your circumstances.