How are shares taxed? - Times Money Mentor (2024)

Important information

Tax treatment depends on your individual circ*mstances and may be subject to future change.

From the start of the 2024/25 tax year, both the dividend tax and capital gains tax allowances were halved. Here we explain what that might mean for your investments.

The raid on dividends and capital gains began in the 2023/24 tax year. Before that time, you could earn £2,000 in dividends before paying tax, while the tax-free allowance for capital gains tax was set at £12,300. Now those figures are £500 and £3,000 respectively.

The move will drag more people into paying tax on their profits. In this article, we explain three main taxes your need to watch out for when buying and selling shares, including:

  • What is dividend tax?
  • Do I need to pay stamp duty?
  • How much is capital gains tax?
  • How do I avoid paying tax on shares?

Want to know your take-home pay after tax? Try this free income tax calculator.

Investing in shares is like owning a tiny piece of a company. Many well-known businesses such as BP, Coca-Cola and Amazon are listed on stock markets, which means people can buy shares in those companies.

It’s a way for businesses to get cash to help them grow and for investors to benefit from that growth.

If the share price goes up between you buying and selling, you make a profit. The company may also pay dividends on a regular basis to reward its shareholders, which is a bit like a cashback reward.

But where there is money to be made, expect the taxman to be lurking somewhere nearby.

Want to know how to buy shares? We explain.

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There are two ways to earn money from shares:

1. The first is that if the company grows and becomes more valuable then your piece of the company will be worth more.

2. The second way is that if the company in which you are invested in pays its shareholders a little bit of money, called a dividend, out of its profits each year, you get an ongoing income.

For the latter payment, the taxman views this as a mini salary for you, even though you aren’t doing any work. This means you will have to pay income tax on investments if your total dividends in a year come to more than £500.

Everyone has a tax-free personal allowance (£12,570 in the 2024/25 tax year and frozen until 2028).

Any money that you receive from your investments will be added to all your other types of income, including wages, personal pensions and rental income.

Depending on all your earnings, you will then be taxed at the bracket that is applicable to you. We outline the thresholds below, which changed for additional-rate taxpayers on April 6, 2023.

Tax bandEarnings thresholdTax rate
Personal allowanceLess than £12,5700%
Basic-rate tax£12,570 to £50,27020%
High-rate tax£50,270 to £125,139 40%
Additional-rate tax£125,140 45%

Read our guide to income tax and enter your earnings into our income tax calculator.

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How are shares taxed? - Times Money Mentor (2)

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Do I have to pay tax on shares?

It depends. There are tax-free thresholds for stamp duty, dividend and capital gains tax, which we outline in this article.

If you exceed these thresholds then it is likely you will have to pay tax.

However, if your shares are held in a tax-efficient product such as an Isa or a pension, you won’t be subject to dividend or capital gains tax.

How much tax do you pay on shares?

It depends whether you are buying, selling or earning dividends on shares.

Dividend tax

Everyone gets a dividend tax-free allowance each year. You won’t have to pay the tax bill if the dividends you earn in a tax year are below £500.

Remember: dividends from shares held in a stocks and shares Isa or pension are tax-free.

You do not need to tell HMRC if your dividends are within the allowance for the tax year.

The tax rate you pay on dividends that exceed the allowance depends on your income tax band, which you can work out by adding your total dividend income to your other income.

In April 2022, the dividend tax rates increased by 1.25%.

Here are the current rates:

  • 8.75% for basic rate taxpayers (from 7.5%)
  • 33.75% for higher rate taxpayers (from 32.5%)
  • 39.35% for additional rate taxpayers (from 38.1%)

Dividend tax example

Say you earn £4,000 in dividends plus £31,500 in salary in the 2024/25 tax year, giving you a total income of £35,500.

We all have a personal allowance of £12,570 which you deduct from your total income. This gives you a taxable income of £23,930. You are in the basic-rate tax band.

So you would pay:

  • 0% tax on £500 of dividends because of the dividend tax allowance
  • 8.75% tax on the remaining £3,500 of dividends = £306 tax to pay (up from £255 in the 2023/24 tax year)

How do I pay my dividend tax bill?

How you pay your tax bill depends on the amount of dividend income you received in the tax year.

If you earn less than £10,000 then you can:

If you earn more than £10,000 in dividends you have to fill in a self-assessment tax return.

If you don’t already do one, remember that the deadline for registering is October 5 after the end of the tax year you’re dealing with.

Once you have registered, you will get a letter from HMRC telling you what to do next.

Stamp duty

When you buy shares, you might have to pay stamp duty. You may be more familiar with this tax when it comes to buying a home.

When you go into a store and buy a T-shirt, you may not see it on the receipt, but included in the price is VAT. This is the tax bill you pay on most goods and services you purchase in the UK.

Shares in a company have something similar: stamp duty.

Most company shares are purchased electronically using something called the Crest system (no, it has nothing to do with toothpaste), while others are bought in the traditional way with paper certificates. Both incur stamp duty.

How your tax bill is calculated depends on how you buy the shares:

  1. Paper = Stamp Duty: set at 0.5% on trades over £1,000 and rounded up to the nearest £5. So if you buy £9,500 worth of shares, 0.5% stamp duty is £47.50, or £50 once rounded up. You must send your stock transfer form to HMRC for stamping along with your payment within 30 days.
  2. Electronically = Stamp Duty Reserve Tax: set at 0.5% of the value of any trade, but only rounded up or down to the nearest penny and taken automatically when you buy. You pay tax on the investment, even if the shares’ actual market value is higher, so if your £9,500 worth of shares in a company are actually valued at £15,000, you only pay SDRT on £9,500.

The good news is that you’re not always subject to taxes. It depends on the type of transaction.

You DO pay stamp duty if you buy:

  • Existing shares in a UK company
  • An option to buy shares
  • Shares in a foreign company that has a share register in the UK

You DON’T pay stamp duty if you buy:

  • Shares worth up to £50,000 as an employee of the company
  • A new issue of shares in a company
  • Shares in an open-ended investment company (OEIC)
  • Units in a unit trust
  • Exchange traded funds (ETFs)
  • Foreign shares outside the UK
  • If you are given shares for nothing

If you owe tax and don’t pay your bill on time, watch out because you could face a penalty and will be charged interest.

You do not need to pay SDRT if you are given shares as a gift.

Inheriting shares

If someone has left you shares, then any inheritance tax owing should be paid by the deceased person’s estate. Find out more in the government’s guide to inheritance tax.

How an inherited portfolio is treated for tax depends on where it is held and the type of shares contained within it.

Money held in an Isa or investment account might be liable for inheritance tax, but a portfolio held in a pension can typically be passed on IHT free.

Capital gains tax

It’s time to say goodbye to your shares. Hopefully they’ve gone up in value and you are set to make a profit. If so, the downside is you may need to pay capital gains tax (CGT).

Note that it is the profit that incurs the tax, not the price you sell your investment for.

You have a capital gains allowance which is set at £3,000 in the 2024/25 financial year (down from £6,000 in 2023/24 and £12,300 the in 2022/23). If your profits are below this level then you don’t have to pay CGT. Find out more in our guide to capital gains tax.

You don’t usually need to pay capital gains tax if you give shares as a gift to your husband, wife, civil partner or a charity.

Or when you dispose of:

  • Shares you’ve put into an Isa or Pep
  • Shares in employer share incentive plans (Sips)
  • UK government gilts
  • Premium Bonds
  • Qualifying corporate bonds
  • Employee shareholder shares, depending on when you got them

If you do have to pay CGT on shares, it is levied at either 10% or 20%, depending on whether you are a basic-rate or higher-rate taxpayer.

So, if you bought shares for £5,000 and sold them for £20,000, that would be a tidy £15,000 gain. Following the cut to the CGT allowance this tax year, £12,000 of that amount would be taxable.

At 10% or 20%, capital gains tax of £1,200 or £2,400 would be due, depending on whether it was charged at the basic or higher rate.

Different capital gain tax rates apply if you are buying a property. Find out more in our CGT guide.

One of the best ways to avoid paying tax is to invest your shares in a tax-free “wrapper” such as an Isa or a pension.

These financial products allow your money to grow free from the grasp of the taxman, so you can buy and sell shares without worrying about the tax-free thresholds.

The added bonus with pensions is that they don’t just help you avoid dividend and capital gains tax, but allow your money to grow free from income tax too.

Find out more in our guide to Isas and pensions.

Important information

Some of the products promoted are from our affiliate partners from whom we receive compensation. While we aim to feature some of the best products available, we cannot review every product on the market.

How are shares taxed? - Times Money Mentor (2024)
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