M&A Tax Advice - Jonathan Lea Network

Tax is a central variable in any merger or acquisition. The structure adopted at the outset — share sale, asset sale, hive-up, hive-down, or group reorganisation — can materially affect value, risk allocation and post-completion outcomes.

Effective M&A tax planning is not about last-minute mitigation. It requires early-stage analysis aligned with commercial objectives, deal mechanics and long-term strategy.

At Jonathan Lea Network, we provide integrated legal and transactional tax support to buyers, sellers and investor-backed businesses across the full M&A lifecycle.

Share Sale vs Asset Sale: Tax Implications

One of the earliest and most commercially sensitive decisions in any transaction concerns structure.

Share Sale

For sellers, a share sale may offer:

  • Potential access to Business Asset Disposal Relief (where conditions are met)
  • Simpler exit from the trading entity
  • Clean transfer of contracts and employees

For buyers, however, a share acquisition involves inheriting historic liabilities. Tax due diligence and warranty protection become critical.

Asset Sale

An asset sale may:

  • Allow buyers to “step up” base cost for capital allowances
  • Ring-fence historic liabilities
  • Enable selective acquisition of assets

However, sellers may face corporation tax on chargeable gains and potentially double taxation if funds are extracted.

The optimal structure depends on commercial leverage, tax profile and future strategy.

Pre-Sale Tax Planning for Sellers

Advance planning can materially improve tax outcomes.

This may include:

  • Group reorganisations prior to disposal
  • Share-for-share exchanges
  • Demergers or hive-downs
  • Ensuring trading status for relief qualification
  • Reviewing shareholder eligibility for available reliefs

Timing is critical. Many reliefs require minimum holding periods or structural conditions to be satisfied well before completion.

We assist sellers in structuring early to protect net proceeds.

Buyer-Side Tax Due Diligence

Buyers must identify and price tax risk appropriately.

Tax due diligence typically focuses on:

  • Corporation tax compliance
  • VAT position and partial exemption risk
  • PAYE and employment-related securities
  • Transfer pricing exposure
  • Historic relief claims
  • SDLT and property-related liabilities

Findings inform:

  • Purchase price negotiations
  • Warranty scope
  • Indemnity drafting
  • Retention or escrow arrangements

Effective coordination between tax analysis and SPA drafting is essential to avoid protection gaps.

Transaction Mechanics and Tax Structuring

M&A transactions frequently involve technical structuring considerations, including:

  • Use of acquisition vehicles
  • Debt push-down strategies
  • Availability of substantial shareholding exemption
  • Loss utilisation within groups
  • Capital allowances optimisation
  • VAT transfer of a going concern (TOGC) treatment

Misalignment between tax structuring and legal execution can create unintended exposure.

We ensure transaction documentation accurately reflects intended tax outcomes.

Private Equity and Investor-Led Transactions

In investor-backed deals, tax structuring often involves:

  • Management equity arrangements
  • Sweet equity and growth shares
  • Ratchet mechanisms
  • Loan note structures
  • Institutional preference rights

These require careful integration with employment-related securities rules and corporate documentation.

We advise on structuring that remains compliant while supporting incentive alignment.

Cross-Border Considerations

Where transactions involve overseas entities or assets, additional complexity may arise, including:

  • Withholding taxes
  • Double tax treaty interaction
  • Permanent establishment risk
  • Hybrid mismatch considerations
  • Exit charges

Early identification of cross-border issues prevents disruption later in the deal process.

Clearance Applications and Risk Management

In certain restructurings, statutory clearances may be advisable to confirm tax treatment in advance.

We advise on:

  • Whether clearance is appropriate
  • Drafting applications
  • Managing HMRC correspondence
  • Evidential support for commercial rationale

Structured documentation reduces challenge risk and enhances transactional certainty.

Post-Completion Planning

Tax planning does not end at completion. Buyers and sellers may need to address:

  • Integration of acquired entities
  • Group loss planning
  • Refinancing structures
  • Deferred consideration tax treatment
  • Earn-out taxation

Early coordination ensures the post-deal structure supports ongoing efficiency.

Our Role in M&A Tax Transactions

We provide:

  • Pre-transaction tax structuring advice
  • Buyer and seller-side tax analysis
  • Integration of tax planning with SPA and APA drafting
  • Risk allocation support through warranties and indemnities
  • Clearance strategy and implementation
  • Post-completion structuring support

Our focus is commercially grounded, technically precise and aligned with transaction execution timelines.

Protecting Value Through Structured Tax Planning

In mergers and acquisitions, tax is rarely neutral. It influences pricing, structure, negotiation leverage and post-completion risk. Early, integrated tax advice ensures that transactions are structured efficiently, defensibly and in alignment with long-term commercial objectives. If you are planning an acquisition, disposal or corporate restructuring, disciplined M&A tax planning can materially affect the net outcome.

Speak to Our M&A Tax Team

If you are contemplating a disposal, acquisition or investor-led transaction, tax structuring should be addressed at the outset, not retrofitted during negotiations.

Engage our M&A tax team early to ensure your transaction is structured efficiently, documented coherently and protected against avoidable risk.

Call us on 01444 708640 or email wewillhelp@jonathanlea.net to arrange a confidential discussion.

FAQ: Mergers & Acquisitions Tax

1. When is it appropriate to seek non-statutory clearance from HMRC in a corporate reorganisation?

SSE can exempt gains on the disposal of trading subsidiaries, but the conditions are technical. The seller must generally have held at least 10% of the ordinary share capital for a continuous 12-month period within the preceding six years, and both the disposing company and the target must meet trading requirements. Pre-sale reorganisations can inadvertently compromise trading status if not structured carefully.

2. How should deferred consideration and earn-outs be taxed and structured?

The tax treatment of earn-outs depends on whether they are structured as ascertainable or unascertainable consideration. This affects the timing of capital gains tax or corporation tax and the availability of reliefs. Poor drafting can convert what was intended to be capital treatment into income, particularly where management shareholders remain involved post-completion.

3. What are the risks of debt push-down structures in acquisition financing?

Debt push-down can enhance interest deductibility within the target group, but must be assessed against the Corporate Interest Restriction (CIR) rules, transfer pricing, unallowable purpose provisions, and hybrid mismatch legislation. Structuring must also align with Companies Act constraints and lender requirements.

4. How does VAT TOGC treatment fail in practice?

VAT transfer of a going concern (TOGC) treatment can prevent VAT leakage on asset acquisitions, but it is highly technical. Failure to meet conditions — such as incorrect option to tax notifications or changes in intended use — can result in unexpected VAT liabilities and cash flow disruption.

5. When is pre-sale restructuring at risk of falling within anti-avoidance provisions?

Transactions designed to secure reliefs (such as demergers or share exchanges) must satisfy “bona fide commercial purpose” tests and avoid main-purpose tax avoidance characterisation. Clearance may be advisable where restructuring precedes a disposal, particularly in private equity or management buy-out contexts.

Photo by Glenn Carstens-Peters on Unsplash

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