
Rising property and investment values mean more UK families face Inheritance Tax (IHT) on their estates. To manage this effectively, many now use Family Investment Companies (FICs)—a flexible way to transfer wealth while keeping control. At Apex Accountants, we specialise in inheritance tax planning for family investment companies, helping families protect assets, maintain governance, and manage long-term tax exposure.
This article outlines how FICs work, the key tax considerations involved, and how our experts design practical, compliant strategies to support sustainable family wealth succession planning.
A Family Investment Company is a private limited company established to hold and manage family assets. The company usually holds investments such as:
Parents often retain control through voting shares, while children or trusts have their own non-voting growth shares. This approach allows parents to direct investments while future growth moves outside their estate for IHT purposes.
Families use FICs to achieve several financial and succession goals:
This approach is central to effective family wealth succession planning, ensuring smooth transitions of assets between generations.
Parents can gift growth shares to their children. These gifts are Potentially Exempt Transfers (PETs) and fall outside the estate after seven years. It allows parents to transfer future growth while keeping control.
An FIC pays corporation tax on profits rather than higher personal income tax rates. Retained profits can be reinvested, compounding long-term family wealth.
Over time, as value shifts to growth shares held by younger family members, the parents’ estate value reduces—potentially lowering IHT exposure.
Parents can fund the FIC through loans instead of gifts. Loan repayments then remove capital from the company gradually without triggering new tax charges.
A client approached Apex Accountants seeking an effective way to pass wealth to their children while maintaining control and staying compliant with UK tax law. After assessing their goals, we recommended establishing a Family Investment Company (FIC).
The parents invested £1 million—£800,000 as a director’s loan and £200,000 as share capital. They held voting shares, while their children received non-voting growth shares, allowing control to remain with the parents while future growth moved to the next generation.
The FIC invested in property and equities, with profits taxed at corporation tax rates and reinvested. Over time, loan repayments reduced the parents’ estate, and the children’s shares increased in value.
Through careful planning and documentation, Apex Accountants helped the family transfer wealth efficiently, reduce potential IHT exposure, and preserve long-term financial control.
An FIC may not be the best option for:
In such cases, alternatives such as trusts, life insurance, or outright PETs may work better. Apex Accountants assess all options before recommending an appropriate structure and can provide tailored inheritance tax advice for family investment companies when needed.
At Apex Accountants, we combine tax expertise with practical experience in wealth succession. Our qualified advisors design structures that are compliant, efficient, and sustainable.
We provide:
Our specialists also deliver strategic inheritance tax advice for family investment companies, helping families implement long-term governance and tax-efficient structures. With our proactive guidance, your Family Investment Company can become a cornerstone of lasting intergenerational success.
Contact Apex Accountants today to arrange a free initial consultation and start building a clear, tax-efficient inheritance plan for your family.
Can offshore investments be held in an FIC?
Yes, but the FIC remains subject to UK tax rules. Reporting obligations under anti-avoidance and controlled foreign company (CFC) rules must be considered.
Can an FIC be wound up or sold later?
Yes. Winding up an FIC may create CGT and distribution tax implications. Selling the company may be efficient if structured correctly. Apex Accountants can help model the exit tax outcomes.
How does an FIC interact with the parents’ wills?
Company shares and loans should align with your will and estate plan. We coordinate with solicitors to keep documents consistent and compliant.
What happens if family members live abroad?
Cross-border ownership may create double-taxation or residency complications. Specialist advice is needed to address local tax and reporting obligations.
Can charitable giving be included within an FIC?
Yes. A family can include charitable donations through corporate giving or by establishing a charitable trust linked to the company.
HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) has adopted a significantly tougher stance on VAT investigations for large businesses recently. Investigations into...
From 1 May 2026, the UK VAT road fuel scale charges change to cover the period to 30 April 2027....
Two UK brothers were recently convicted for abusing the government’s film tax relief scheme. Between 2011 and 2015 they submitted...
In a 2026 tax appeal, the First-tier Tribunal (Tax) upheld HMRC’s view that a written-off director’s loan triggers an income...
Recent headlines cite official UK data showing that HMRC spent “£186 million” enforcing the loan charge. The loan charge enforcement...
The position is now much clearer. Retail access to certain crypto exchange-traded notes (crypto ETNs) in an IFISA was reopened...
The VAT payroll fraud case in brief On 21 April 2026, a Scottish court case ended with four prison sentences...
Slow adoption despite clear government deadlines HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) achieved a major milestone on 6 April 2026, when...
A recent case in Shetland has put the spotlight on VAT fraud and confiscation orders in the UK. A businessman...
Since April 2025, the UK government has abolished the Furnished Holiday Lettings (FHL) tax regime, aligning short-term rental profits with...