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Permanent Establishment Risk in UK: 2026 Guide

By CountryTaxCalc Research Team
UK Corporation Tax Rate (2026)
25% for PE profits above £250K (19% small profits rate below £50K)
Employer National Insurance
15% on earnings above £5,000/year (increased from 13.8% in 2025)
PE Definition (OECD Model)
Fixed place of business or dependent agent (DAPE rules updated Jan 2026)
Home Office PE Risk
Low unless address used on contracts/website or company requires work from location
Draft Legislation (2025-26)
Finance Bill 2025-26 to codify HMRC PE approach into statute
COVID-19 Relief Extended
HMRC maintains flexible approach—short-term remote work doesn't create PE

The United Kingdom has a pragmatic but evolving approach to permanent establishment (PE) for foreign companies hiring remote workers. Following COVID-19, HMRC (HM Revenue & Customs) issued flexible guidance recognizing that temporary remote work arrangements don't automatically create PE. However, January 2026 brings significant changes with updated dependent agent permanent establishment (DAPE) rules and draft legislation expected in Finance Bill 2025-26.

For foreign companies hiring UK-based remote employees, the stakes are substantial: corporation tax at 25% on attributable profits (15% for smaller operations under £50K profit), employer National Insurance contributions of 15% on all earnings above £5,000 annually, and complex PAYE compliance requirements. Unlike Germany's strict enforcement, the UK takes a more fact-based, case-by-case approach—but this flexibility creates uncertainty.

This guide explains UK PE rules, HMRC's latest guidance, 2026 legislative changes, real enforcement patterns, and practical compliance strategies for companies hiring remotely in the UK.

Why the UK Has a Flexible (But Changing) PE Approach

The UK's permanent establishment framework differs from continental European approaches in three key ways:

1. Common Law Pragmatism vs. Civil Law Formalism

UK tax law follows a common law tradition emphasizing substance over form. HMRC guidance explicitly states that PE determinations require "sufficient degree of stability/permanence" and are assessed based on facts and circumstances—not bright-line rules like Germany's rigid §12 AO framework.

Example: A French company with a UK employee working from home 3 days/week for 8 months might not create UK PE if the home office is personal premises, the employee lacks contract authority, and the arrangement is clearly temporary. In Germany, similar facts could trigger PE under the Betriebsstätte doctrine.

2. Post-Brexit Clarity and London's Role as Financial Center

Post-Brexit, the UK aims to maintain London's position as a global financial center. Overly aggressive PE enforcement would drive international companies away. HMRC's approach balances:

  • Revenue protection: Ensuring substantial UK operations pay UK taxes
  • Business competitiveness: Not penalizing companies for minor UK connections
  • Simplicity: Avoiding complex cross-border disputes that deter investment

However, Finance Bill 2025-26 draft legislation signals a shift toward more codified rules, reducing HMRC discretion and aligning closer to OECD standards.

3. COVID-19 Legacy and Remote Work Normalization

In March 2020, HMRC issued INTM261010 guidance explicitly stating that pandemic-related remote work won't automatically create PE. Key principles from this guidance (still in effect in 2026):

  • "Exceptional and temporary" test: Short-term remote work (under 6-12 months) due to COVID-19 or similar exceptional circumstances doesn't establish PE
  • No fixed place of business: Employee home offices used sporadically or intermittently aren't "at the disposal of the enterprise"
  • Case-by-case assessment: HMRC emphasizes reviewing totality of circumstances rather than applying automatic triggers

This pragmatic approach remains UK policy in 2026, though draft legislation aims to provide statutory footing.

2026 Legislative Changes (Finance Bill 2025-26)

Expected to be introduced in Spring 2026, the Finance Bill will:

  1. Codify HMRC PE interpretation: Currently based on OECD Model and case law, new legislation will provide statutory definitions
  2. Update DAPE rules: Effective January 1, 2026, dependent agent PE rules follow updated OECD Model—no longer requiring "authority to conclude contracts," now includes persons who "habitually play the principal role leading to conclusion of contracts"
  3. Profit attribution clarity: New rules on how to attribute profits to UK PE (following OECD Authorised OECD Approach)
  4. Remove ambiguity: Current reliance on HMRC manuals and informal guidance to be replaced with clear statutory provisions

Impact: While UK will remain more flexible than Germany or France, the legislative shift means more PE assessments will be challenged and foreign companies need clearer documentation of UK operations.

UK Definition of Permanent Establishment (OECD Model + Domestic Law)

Legal Framework: Treaty + Domestic Law Interaction

UK PE determination follows a two-step process:

  1. Tax treaty (if applicable): UK has 130+ double taxation agreements based on OECD Model. Treaty definitions override domestic law where more restrictive
  2. UK domestic law: Corporation Tax Act 2009 and 2010 provisions apply to non-treaty countries and supplement treaty rules

OECD Article 5 PE Definition (UK Standard)

Under most UK tax treaties (following OECD Model Article 5):

"The term 'permanent establishment' means a fixed place of business through which the business of an enterprise is wholly or partly carried on."

Three Core PE Types in UK Context

1. Fixed Place of Business PE (Article 5(1))

Requires four elements:

  • Place of business: Physical location (office, warehouse, workshop, or even home office)
  • Fixed: Sufficient degree of permanence (HMRC guidance: typically 6-12 months, but case-dependent)
  • "Through which": Business activities actually conducted at the location
  • "At disposal of enterprise": Company has right to use premises (ownership, lease, or effective control)

Key UK clarification (HMRC INTM266040):

  • Home office is "at the disposal of the enterprise" only if:
    • Address appears on company website, contracts, or invoices
    • Company requires employee to work from specific location
    • Client meetings regularly held at home office
    • Company provides furniture or pays home office allowance (increasing control factor)
  • Personal home office used incidentally = low PE risk
  • Coworking hot-desking (no assigned seat) = low PE risk
  • Fixed desk coworking (6+ months) = moderate PE risk
  • Dedicated leased office = immediate PE

2. Dependent Agent PE (DAPE) - Updated January 2026

Before 2026, dependent agent PE required an agent with authority to conclude contracts. Effective January 1, 2026, UK adopted OECD's updated DAPE rules (BEPS Action 7):

New DAPE triggers (2026 onwards):

  • Habitually concludes contracts: Agent regularly signs contracts on behalf of foreign company (traditional rule, still applies)
  • Habitually plays principal role leading to conclusion of contracts: Agent negotiates all substantive elements of contracts, even if final signature happens elsewhere
  • "Habitually" threshold: HMRC interprets as "regularly and repeatedly, not isolated cases" (no specific number of contracts defined)

Example (New DAPE rule in action): A US SaaS company employs a UK-based Sales Director who:

  • Negotiates pricing, terms, and contract details with UK enterprise clients
  • Presents proposals and handles all client communications
  • Final contracts signed electronically by US CEO

Result under 2026 rules: DAPE created. The Sales Director "plays the principal role" leading to contract conclusion, even though they don't sign. Pre-2026, this might not be DAPE (no formal authority). Post-2026, HMRC can argue PE exists.

3. Construction/Installation PE (Article 5(3))

Construction sites, building projects, or installation projects lasting more than 12 months automatically create PE (shorter than most other countries—some use 18-24 month thresholds).

Article 5(4) Exceptions: Preparatory/Auxiliary Activities

These activities don't create PE under most UK treaties:

  • Storage, display, or delivery of goods (pure logistics/warehousing)
  • Maintaining stock for processing by another enterprise
  • Purchasing goods or collecting information
  • Preparatory or auxiliary activities (market research, back-office support not constituting core business)

HMRC interpretation: "Preparatory/auxiliary" is narrowly construed. If activity generates revenue or is core to business model, exception doesn't apply.

Example: An Amazon fulfillment center in UK does create PE—not just auxiliary warehousing, but integral to revenue generation. A pure third-party logistics provider storing goods for a foreign client = no PE for the foreign client.

UK-Specific PE Risk Factors (HMRC Enforcement Patterns)

Based on HMRC manuals and case law, these factors increase PE risk:

FactorPE RiskHMRC Guidance
Employee home office (personal premises, no company control)LowINTM261010: "Intermittent use not at disposal of enterprise"
Home office with company allowance/furnitureModerateIncreases "at disposal" factor, requires case-by-case review
Home address on contracts/websiteHighStrong indicator premises "at disposal of enterprise"
Fixed desk coworking (6+ months)Moderate-HighPermanence + disposal factors present
Dedicated leased officeImmediate PEClear fixed place of business
Employee with contract negotiation authorityHigh (DAPE)INTM266140: "Authority to conclude contracts" triggers DAPE
Employee "principal role" in contracts (post-2026)High (New DAPE)INTM264510: Updated DAPE rules effective Jan 2026
Management decisions made from UKModerate-High"Place of effective management" can create PE under some treaties
UK server/data center (company-owned)Low-ModerateEmerging area—not clearly defined in HMRC guidance

Key PE Triggers: Remote Workers, Home Offices & DAPE Rules

Remote Employees in UK (Primary Risk Scenarios)

Foreign companies hiring UK remote workers face PE risk primarily through:

1. Home Office as Fixed Place of Business

Low-risk scenario (No PE):

  • Employee works from personal home using company laptop
  • No home office allowance or company-provided furniture
  • Home address not used on business materials
  • No regular client meetings at home
  • Employee free to work from cafes, libraries, or other locations

Example: A Canadian e-commerce company hires a UK-based customer support specialist working from their London flat 5 days/week. Company provides laptop and software access. Employee uses personal desk, internet, and workspace. HMRC assessment: No PE. Home office is not "at disposal of enterprise"—intermittent personal use for work doesn't create fixed place of business.

Higher-risk scenario (Potential PE):

  • Company pays £500/month home office allowance
  • Company provides desk, chair, monitor, office equipment
  • Employee's home address listed on company website "UK Office"
  • Client video calls held from home office (clients perceive it as company location)
  • Company requires work from home (not optional flexible arrangement)

Example: A Swiss fintech employs a UK Compliance Officer working from Manchester home office. Company pays £600/month office allowance, provides ergonomic furniture, and lists the address as "UK Compliance Office" on its website. HMRC assessment: Likely PE. Company exercises control over premises, uses address for business purposes, and arrangement is permanent (18 months).

2. Dependent Agent PE (DAPE) - 2026 Updated Rules

The January 2026 DAPE changes significantly expand PE risk for sales and business development roles:

Traditional DAPE (Pre-2026): Required agent with formal authority to conclude contracts (sign on behalf of company)

New DAPE (2026 onwards): Includes agents who "habitually play the principal role leading to the conclusion of contracts"

What "Principal Role" Means (HMRC Guidance INTM264510)

According to updated HMRC manuals, an employee plays the "principal role" if they:

  • Negotiate pricing, payment terms, and contract scope with clients
  • Customize proposals and present offerings to clients
  • Handle client objections and finalize deal terms
  • Are the primary point of contact throughout sales process

The fact that final contracts are signed by someone else (e.g., US CEO or automated e-signature) no longer prevents DAPE if the UK employee did the substantive negotiation work.

High-risk roles under new DAPE rules:

  • Sales Directors/Managers: Negotiating enterprise contracts with UK clients
  • Business Development Executives: Pitching services and closing deals
  • Account Managers: Expanding existing client contracts
  • Partnership Managers: Negotiating partnership agreements

Lower-risk roles (support functions, not DAPE):

  • Customer support (no contract authority)
  • Engineers/developers (technical work, no client contracts)
  • Back-office operations (finance, HR, admin)
  • Marketing (unless directly negotiating advertising contracts)

Case Study: US SaaS Company with UK Sales Director

Facts: A US SaaS company ($50M annual revenue) hires a UK-based Sales Director in London to expand into UK/Europe. The director:

  • Manages UK enterprise sales (£5M annual bookings)
  • Negotiates contracts with FTSE 250 clients
  • Presents proposals, handles pricing negotiations, finalizes terms
  • Final contracts signed electronically by US CEO
  • Works from personal home office (no company control)
  • No UK office or leased space

Pre-2026 assessment: Likely no PE. Director lacks formal authority to sign contracts (US CEO signs), and home office is personal premises.

2026 assessment (New DAPE rules): PE created. Director plays "principal role" leading to contract conclusion. Even though home office is personal premises (no fixed place PE), the DAPE route creates PE based on director's contract negotiation activities.

Tax consequence: £5M in UK bookings attributable to UK PE × estimated 60% gross margin = £3M attributable profit × 25% UK corporation tax = £750K annual UK tax liability, plus employer NI contributions (~15% on director's salary), plus PAYE compliance.

Coworking Spaces & Flexible Offices

UK coworking arrangements present nuanced PE risks:

Arrangement TypePE Risk LevelReasoning
Hot-desking (no assigned seat, drop-in use)Very LowNo fixed place—employee uses different locations, insufficient permanence
Fixed desk membership (3-6 months)Low-ModerateApproaching permanence threshold, but UK is flexible on duration
Fixed desk membership (12+ months)Moderate-HighPermanence established, disposition likely if desk consistently used
Private office lease (any duration)Immediate PEClear fixed place of business at disposal of enterprise
Meeting room bookings (occasional)Very LowSporadic use, not "through which business is carried on"
Virtual office (mail forwarding only)Very LowNo physical business activities conducted

HMRC position: Coworking hot-desking generally doesn't create PE unless employee consistently uses same location in a way that demonstrates "at disposal of enterprise" (e.g., company pays for membership, employee's name on desk, regular client meetings at location).

Cross-Border Commuters & Travel Days

UK follows tax treaty provisions for employees living in UK but working abroad (or vice versa):

  • Short-term business visitors: Under most treaties, employees present in UK under 183 days in 12-month period don't trigger PE if paid by non-UK entity and employer has no UK PE
  • However: 183-day rule is for employment income taxation, not PE determination. If employee's UK activities create fixed place of business or DAPE, PE can exist regardless of days present

Example: A US company sends a Senior Director to UK for 90 days to negotiate a major partnership deal. Director stays in hotels (no fixed place), but negotiates all contract terms with UK partner. HMRC assessment under 2026 rules: Potential DAPE. Director plays principal role in contract, even though physically present under 183 days.

Management & Control Test

Some UK tax treaties include a "place of effective management" PE clause. If a company's strategic management decisions are made from UK (e.g., board meetings held in London, key executives based in UK), PE can be created even without fixed premises.

Risk factors:

  • Majority of board members UK-resident
  • CEO or CFO operating from UK
  • Strategic decisions (M&A, financing, major contracts) made in UK

This is rare in practice for typical hiring scenarios but relevant for companies relocating senior management to UK.

UK Tax Rates and Compliance Requirements

Corporation Tax on PE Profits (2026 Rates)

UK corporation tax follows a tiered structure based on profit levels:

Profit LevelCorporation Tax RateNotes
£0 - £50,00019% (Small Profits Rate)Available to UK companies and PEs of foreign companies with treaty protection
£50,001 - £250,00019%-25% (Marginal Relief)Effective rate gradually increases—calculated via marginal relief formula
Over £250,00025% (Main Rate)Standard rate for larger companies

Important distinction for non-resident companies:

  • With UK PE: If company has tax treaty protection, profits may qualify for Small Profits Rate (19%) or Marginal Relief if under thresholds
  • Without treaty protection: Non-resident companies are taxed at main rate (25%) regardless of profit level—no access to Small Profits Rate or Marginal Relief

Profit Attribution to UK PE

UK follows OECD Authorised OECD Approach (AOA) for attributing profits to PE:

  1. Functional analysis: What functions does UK PE perform? (sales, R&D, management, support)
  2. Asset attribution: What assets (IP, equipment, capital) does PE use?
  3. Risk analysis: What business risks does PE assume?
  4. Arm's length pricing: What profit would independent enterprise earn for similar functions?

Practical allocation approaches:

  • Direct attribution: Identify revenue and costs directly linked to UK operations (most accurate)
  • Proportional methods: Allocate global profit based on UK headcount, revenue, or costs
  • Conservative safe harbor: Some advisors use 40-60% of UK employee costs as proxy for attributable profit (not official HMRC guidance, but commonly used in practice)

Example calculation:

  • US tech company with UK Sales Director earning £120K salary
  • Director generates £4M in UK client revenue
  • Company gross margin: 70%
  • Attributable profit estimate: £4M × 70% margin × 50% attribution = £1.4M
  • UK corporation tax: £1.4M × 25% = £350K annual tax liability

Employer National Insurance Contributions (NICs) - 2026 Rates

If a foreign company has UK PE or directly employs UK workers, employer National Insurance applies:

2026 Employer NIC Rates

  • Primary rate: 15% on employee earnings above £5,000/year (£417/month)
  • Increased from 13.8% in 2025—significant cost increase
  • No upper earnings limit—applies to all earnings above threshold

Employment Allowance (Relief for Smaller Employers)

  • Eligible employers can claim £10,500 annual allowance (offsets NIC liability)
  • Previous £100,000 eligibility cap removed in 2026
  • Applies to most employers except companies where sole employee is also director

Employer NIC calculation example:

  • UK employee earning £60,000/year
  • Threshold: £5,000/year
  • Taxable earnings: £60,000 - £5,000 = £55,000
  • Employer NIC: £55,000 × 15% = £8,250/year
  • If Employment Allowance available: £8,250 - £10,500 allowance = £0 (fully offset)

For companies with multiple UK employees, NIC adds ~15% to payroll costs beyond the first £70K in aggregate salaries.

PAYE (Pay As You Earn) Compliance

Foreign companies with UK PE or directly employing UK workers must operate PAYE system:

PAYE Requirements

  1. Register as employer with HMRC: Obtain employer PAYE reference number
  2. Real Time Information (RTI) reporting: Submit payroll data to HMRC on or before each payday
    • Full Payment Submission (FPS) reports employee pay, deductions, NIC
    • Electronic submission required (no paper submissions accepted)
  3. Withhold income tax: Apply correct tax codes (provided by HMRC based on employee circumstances)
    • UK personal allowance (2026/27): £12,570 (no tax on first £12,570 of income)
    • Basic rate: 20% on £12,571-£50,270
    • Higher rate: 40% on £50,271-£125,140
    • Additional rate: 45% above £125,140
  4. Employee NIC deductions: Withhold employee National Insurance (12% on earnings £12,570-£50,270, 2% above)
  5. Pension auto-enrolment: Enroll eligible employees in workplace pension (minimum 8% total contribution: 5% employee, 3% employer)
  6. P60 annual statements: Provide to employees by May 31 following tax year
  7. P11D benefits reporting: Report taxable benefits (company cars, private medical insurance) by July 6

PAYE Penalties

  • Late RTI filing: £100-£400/month depending on company size
  • Late payment of PAYE/NIC: Interest charges (7.75% in 2026) plus penalties (1-10% of unpaid amount depending on delay)
  • Incorrect returns: Penalties up to 100% of tax shortfall for deliberate errors

VAT Registration (If Applicable)

If UK PE generates £90,000+ in taxable supplies in 12 months, VAT registration is mandatory:

  • Standard rate: 20%
  • Reduced rate: 5% (certain goods/services)
  • Zero rate: 0% (exports, books, children's clothing)
  • Quarterly VAT returns via Making Tax Digital (MTD) system

Annual Compliance Obligations

UK PE of foreign company must file:

  1. Corporation Tax return (CT600): Due 12 months after end of accounting period
    • Must include PE profit attribution calculations
    • Financial statements (UK GAAP or IFRS acceptable)
  2. Quarterly estimated tax payments: Large companies (£1.5M+ annual profit) pay quarterly installments
  3. Transfer pricing documentation: Required if PE transacts with parent company or related parties—maintain arm's length pricing evidence
  4. Country-by-Country Reporting (CbCR): If global group revenue exceeds €750M, annual CbCR filing required

Total Cost of UK PE Compliance

Estimated annual costs for foreign company with UK PE:

  • Accounting/bookkeeping: £5,000-£15,000/year
  • Tax compliance (CT600 filing): £3,000-£8,000/year
  • Payroll services (PAYE/RTI): £1,500-£4,000/year
  • Transfer pricing documentation: £8,000-£25,000 (one-time) + £3,000-£8,000/year updates
  • Legal/advisory: £5,000-£15,000/year
  • Total: £22,500-£67,000/year in compliance costs alone, excluding tax liability

For comparison, Employer of Record (EOR) services like Deel cost £500-£700/month per employee (~£6,000-£8,400/year) with zero PE risk and no separate compliance burden.

Real UK PE Cases & HMRC Enforcement Patterns

Unlike Germany's well-documented PE case law, UK has fewer public PE disputes—most are resolved through HMRC enquiries and settlements rather than tribunal litigation. However, patterns from HMRC guidance, professional advisors, and industry reports reveal enforcement trends:

Case Pattern 1: Coworking Space Discovery (2024 Settlement)

Facts (anonymized from advisor report): A Swedish SaaS company hired 2 UK-based account managers who worked from WeWork London using fixed desk memberships (18-month contracts). Employees had assigned desks, received mail at WeWork address, and held client video calls from the space.

HMRC discovered the arrangement through a routine audit of the coworking provider (HMRC periodically requests client lists from major coworking operators to identify potential non-resident PE situations).

HMRC Assessment:

  • Fixed place of business: Yes (assigned desks for 18 months = permanence + disposition)
  • Business carried on: Yes (client-facing sales activities)
  • PE created: 18 months retrospectively

Tax Consequence (Settlement):

  • Attributed profit: £800K (based on UK client revenue and profit allocation)
  • Corporation tax: £200K (25% of £800K)
  • Employer NIC (retrospective): £45K
  • Penalties: £30K (reduced through voluntary disclosure cooperation)
  • Interest: £18K (7.75% on unpaid tax)
  • Total settlement: £293K

Lesson: Fixed desk coworking for 12+ months creates PE risk in UK. Use hot-desking or EOR to avoid.

Case Pattern 2: Dependent Agent PE - Sales Director (2023 Enquiry)

Facts: A US fintech hired a UK-based VP of Sales (London) responsible for UK/Europe expansion. The VP:

  • Negotiated contracts with UK banks and financial institutions
  • Presented product demos and pricing proposals
  • Worked through sales cycle from lead to close
  • Final contracts signed by US CEO electronically
  • Worked from personal home office (no company control)

HMRC initiated enquiry after noticing the VP's LinkedIn profile showing "UK expansion" role for US fintech.

HMRC Position (Pre-2026 rules):

  • No fixed place PE: Home office is personal premises, insufficient control by company
  • Dependent agent PE uncertain: VP negotiated deals but lacked formal authority to sign
  • Requested detailed documentation on VP's role and contract approval process

Outcome (Settlement):

  • Company provided evidence that all contracts required US CEO approval (not rubber-stamp)
  • VP's role reclassified as "business development" rather than "sales closer"
  • HMRC accepted no PE but warned that any expansion of VP's authority could trigger re-assessment
  • Company subsequently engaged Deel EOR for UK hires to eliminate ambiguity

Note: Under 2026 updated DAPE rules, same facts would likely result in PE finding—VP clearly "plays principal role" even without signing authority.

Case Pattern 3: Home Office with Client Meetings (2022 Settlement)

Facts: A Canadian consulting firm employed a UK senior consultant who:

  • Worked from home office in Bristol
  • Home address listed on consultant's business cards and email signature
  • Held in-person client meetings at home office (~12 meetings over 10 months)
  • Company provided office furniture and £400/month home office allowance

Client flagged arrangement during routine vendor compliance review and inquired about UK PE status.

HMRC Assessment (Proactive Disclosure):

  • Home office "at disposal of enterprise": Yes (company control through allowance, furniture, use on business materials)
  • Fixed place of business: Yes (10 months = sufficient permanence, client meetings demonstrate "through which business carried on")
  • PE created

Tax Consequence:

  • Attributed profit: £180K (consultant's billable revenue - allocated costs)
  • Corporation tax: £45K (25%)
  • Employer NIC: £12K
  • Penalties waived: Company made proactive disclosure before HMRC enquiry
  • Total liability: £57K

Lesson: Using employee home address on business materials + client meetings at home = strong PE risk. Keep home offices personal.

Case Pattern 4: Short-Term COVID Remote Work (No PE) - 2021

Facts: A German manufacturing company had a UK employee (engineer) who returned to UK during COVID-19 (March 2020) and worked remotely for 14 months. Employee:

  • Worked from personal home office
  • Performed technical engineering work (no client-facing or contract activities)
  • Arrangement temporary due to COVID travel restrictions

Company filed PAYE and employer NIC in UK for the employee but questioned whether PE was created.

HMRC Assessment (Per INTM261010 COVID Guidance):

  • "Exceptional and temporary" circumstances: Yes (COVID-19 qualified)
  • No fixed place PE: Arrangement not permanent despite 14-month duration
  • No DAPE: Engineer had no contract authority
  • No PE created

Outcome: HMRC confirmed no PE assessment. Company continued PAYE compliance but not required to file UK corporation tax return or attribute profits to UK.

Note: This flexibility remains in effect in 2026, but HMRC emphasizes it applies to genuine temporary arrangements, not permanent remote hiring post-COVID.

HMRC Enforcement Triggers: How Do They Find Out?

Based on advisor reports and HMRC guidance, common discovery methods:

  1. PAYE/NIC filings: If company files PAYE for UK employee, HMRC may enquire about PE status (employer filing doesn't automatically create PE, but raises questions)
  2. Coworking provider audits: HMRC periodically audits WeWork, Regus, and other providers to identify foreign companies using fixed desks
  3. Cross-border information exchange: OECD Common Reporting Standard (CRS) shares data between tax authorities—HMRC receives reports of UK residents receiving payments from foreign entities
  4. Client vendor audits: Large UK companies (especially financial institutions) conduct vendor compliance reviews and may ask about PE status
  5. Employee tax returns: UK employees file personal tax returns showing foreign employer—HMRC may enquire if employer is UK-taxable
  6. LinkedIn and public profiles: HMRC tax investigators review LinkedIn, company websites, press releases for evidence of UK operations
  7. Whistleblowers: Disgruntled former employees occasionally report employers to HMRC

HMRC Approach: Negotiation Over Litigation

Unlike some jurisdictions with aggressive PE enforcement, HMRC typically:

  • Requests information first: Enquiry letters asking about UK operations, employee roles, and business activities
  • Encourages disclosure: Significantly reduced penalties (often waived) for companies making proactive voluntary disclosures
  • Settles pragmatically: Most cases resolve through negotiated profit attribution and settlement rather than tribunal litigation
  • Focuses on substantial cases: HMRC less likely to pursue PE assessments where UK operations are minimal (single employee, low revenue attribution)

Average settlement time: 6-18 months from initial enquiry to resolution.

How to Avoid PE in UK: Compliance Strategies

Strategy 1: Employer of Record (EOR) - Recommended for 1-10 Employees

An Employer of Record is a UK-registered entity that employs your workers on your behalf, eliminating PE risk entirely.

How EOR Works in UK

  1. EOR (e.g., Deel UK Limited) becomes legal employer under UK employment law
  2. EOR handles all compliance: PAYE, NIC, RTI reporting, pension auto-enrolment, employment contracts
  3. You manage employee day-to-day (projects, performance, company culture)
  4. You pay EOR monthly fee per employee: £500-£700/month (~£6,000-£8,400/year)
  5. Result: No UK PE—you have no direct UK presence, employee works for UK entity

Deel UK Compliance (Recommended Partner)

Deel provides comprehensive UK EOR services:

  • UK employment contracts: Compliant with Employment Rights Act 1996, Working Time Regulations
  • PAYE & NIC: Real Time Information (RTI) submissions, tax code management, year-end P60s
  • Pension auto-enrolment: NEST or alternative workplace pension scheme setup and management
  • Statutory benefits: Sick pay (SSP), maternity/paternity leave, holiday pay (28 days minimum)
  • Employment law compliance: Notice periods, redundancy protection, disciplinary procedures
  • Termination support: UK employment law heavily protects employees—Deel manages compliant off-boarding

Cost comparison (single UK employee at £60K salary):

  • Direct hire with PE: ~£22K-£67K setup + ongoing compliance + 25% corporation tax on attributed profits + audit risk
  • Deel EOR: £599/month = £7,188/year, zero PE risk, no setup costs, no compliance burden

Deel is optimal for:

  • 1-10 UK employees
  • Companies testing UK market before committing to entity setup
  • Sales/BD roles (DAPE risk mitigation)
  • Fast hiring (start in days, not months)

Hire in UK without PE risk via Deel →

Strategy 2: Independent Contractor Classification (Moderate Risk)

UK has IR35 rules (off-payroll working legislation) to prevent false self-employment. Misclassification creates tax liability and penalties.

UK Contractor Status Tests

HMRC assesses contractor vs. employee status using:

  • Control: Does company dictate when, where, and how work is performed? (Employee indicator)
  • Substitution: Can contractor send substitute to perform work? (Contractor indicator)
  • Mutuality of obligation: Must company provide work and must contractor accept it? (Employee indicator)
  • Integration: Is contractor integrated into company operations? (Employee indicator)
  • Financial risk: Does contractor bear financial risk (own equipment, liability insurance)? (Contractor indicator)
  • Part and parcel: Does contractor receive employee benefits (pension, sick pay)? (Employee indicator)

IR35 "Deemed Employment" Consequences

If contractor is inside IR35 (deemed employee):

  • Company liable for PAYE and employer NIC retrospectively (up to 6 years)
  • Penalties: 100% of unpaid tax for deliberate errors
  • Interest charges compound

HMRC Check Employment Status for Tax (CEST) tool: Online tool to assess IR35 status (not legally binding but HMRC generally respects outcome)

When Contractor Classification Works

  • Project-based work (clear start/end dates, specific deliverables)
  • Contractor has multiple clients (documented)
  • Contractor provides own equipment and workspace
  • Contractor carries professional indemnity insurance
  • Duration under 12 months (longer = employee indicator)
  • No integration into company systems (email, Slack, internal tools)

Recommendation: Use contractor classification only for genuine short-term project work (under 6 months). For ongoing roles, use EOR.

Strategy 3: Establish UK Entity (Limited Company)

For companies planning 10+ UK employees or £5M+ UK revenue, forming a UK subsidiary provides full control and better unit economics at scale.

UK Limited Company Formation

Two main structures:

  1. Private Limited Company (Ltd): Most common, standard corporate structure
  2. Public Limited Company (PLC): For companies planning public listing (rare for foreign subsidiaries)

Formation Process (Ltd)

  • Name registration: Check availability at Companies House
  • Memorandum & Articles: Define company structure (standard templates available)
  • Share capital: Minimum £1 (typically £100 for administrative convenience)
  • Directors: At least one director (can be non-UK resident post-Brexit)
  • Registered office: UK address required (can be registered agent service)
  • Registration: File incorporation documents at Companies House
  • Timeline: 24 hours to 1 week (online same-day incorporation available)
  • Cost: £12 Companies House fee + £500-£2,000 legal/administrative fees

Post-Formation Compliance

  • Corporation Tax registration: Register within 3 months of starting business activities
  • VAT registration: If taxable supplies exceed £90K/year
  • PAYE registration: If employing staff
  • Accounting records: Maintain books, prepare annual accounts (UK GAAP or IFRS)
  • Annual filings:
    • Confirmation Statement (annually, £34 fee)
    • Annual accounts (9 months after financial year-end)
    • Corporation Tax return (12 months after accounting period)
  • Audit requirement: Companies above £10.2M turnover or £5.1M assets require audit

Annual Compliance Costs

  • Accountant/bookkeeper: £3,000-£10,000/year
  • Tax compliance: £2,000-£6,000/year
  • Payroll services: £1,500-£4,000/year (if using external provider)
  • Legal/advisory: £2,000-£8,000/year
  • Total: £8,500-£28,000/year

When UK Ltd Makes Sense

  • 10+ UK employees
  • £5M+ annual UK revenue
  • Need UK bank account for local payments
  • UK client preference for contracting with local entity
  • Long-term commitment to UK market (5+ years)

Advantages

  • ✅ Full control over operations
  • ✅ Lower per-employee cost at scale (vs. EOR fees)
  • ✅ UK corporate identity builds trust
  • ✅ Ability to own UK assets, IP, contracts

Disadvantages

  • ❌ Ongoing compliance burden
  • ❌ Requires local director or authorized representative
  • ❌ Corporate governance obligations
  • ❌ Dissolution takes 3-6 months if closing

Strategy 4: Limit UK Activities (Defensive Structuring)

Preparatory/Auxiliary Activities Exception

Structure UK operations to fall within Article 5(4) exceptions (activities that don't create PE):

  • Pure logistics/warehousing: Use third-party fulfillment center (3PL) for storage and shipping—3PL's activities don't create PE for foreign client
  • Market research only: Employees gathering information without concluding contracts
  • Back-office support: Finance, HR, admin functions supporting non-UK operations

Example: A US e-commerce company uses Amazon FBA (Fulfillment by Amazon) for UK storage and shipping. Since Amazon provides service to US company (not UK entity), and activities are auxiliary (logistics, not core business), no PE created for US company.

Remote Work Policies (Minimize UK Presence)

  • Home office guidelines:
    • Prohibit use of home address on business materials
    • No client meetings at employee homes
    • No home office allowances (provide laptop only)
    • Encourage coworking hot-desking (no fixed desks)
  • Duration limits: Structure arrangements as temporary (under 12 months) with clear end date or review point
  • Authority restrictions: Ensure UK employees lack contract conclusion authority (all contracts approved by non-UK executives)

Strategy 5: Proactive Disclosure & HMRC Clearance

If uncertain about PE status, consider:

  • Non-Statutory Clearance: Request HMRC opinion on proposed structure (informal, not legally binding but HMRC generally honors)
  • Advance Pricing Agreement (APA): For larger operations, negotiate profit attribution methodology with HMRC upfront
  • Proactive disclosure: If PE may exist, voluntary disclosure before HMRC enquiry significantly reduces penalties

Risk Mitigation Checklist

  • No fixed office/coworking desk: Employees use personal homes or hot-desk coworking only
  • No home office control: No allowances, company-provided furniture, or address on business materials
  • No contract authority: UK employees don't negotiate or conclude contracts (post-2026 DAPE risk)
  • Contractor classification defensible: If using contractors, passed CEST tool assessment and have multiple clients
  • EOR in place: For revenue-generating roles, using Deel or similar to eliminate PE risk
  • UK entity if scaling: If 10+ employees, formed UK Ltd with proper compliance
  • PAYE compliance: If employing directly, PAYE and RTI reporting current
  • Documentation maintained: Employment contracts, authority matrices, role descriptions demonstrate structure

Compliance Checklist for Companies Hiring in UK

Phase 1: Pre-Hire Assessment (Before Making Offer)

  1. ☐ Define role and authority:
    • Will employee negotiate or conclude contracts? (DAPE risk—use EOR if yes)
    • Will employee have management/strategic authority?
    • What client-facing activities will employee perform?
  2. ☐ Assess work location:
    • Personal home office (low risk) vs. fixed coworking desk (moderate risk) vs. leased office (immediate PE)
    • Will home address appear on business materials?
    • Will company provide home office allowance or furniture?
  3. ☐ Check tax treaty:
    • Does UK-[your country] tax treaty exist?
    • Review treaty PE definition (Article 5) and compare to domestic law
  4. ☐ Estimate PE exposure:
    • If PE created, what UK revenue would be attributed?
    • Calculate potential tax liability (25% corporation tax + 15% employer NIC)
    • Compare to EOR cost (£600-£700/month)
  5. ☐ Select hiring strategy:
    • EOR (recommended for most scenarios)
    • Contractor (only if genuinely outside IR35)
    • UK entity (if scaling to 10+ employees)

Phase 2: Hire Execution (Within 30 Days of Start)

  1. ☐ Engage EOR (if chosen):
    • Set up Deel account
    • Provide job description, salary, benefits
    • EOR prepares UK-compliant employment contract
  2. ☐ UK employment contract (if direct hire): Must include:
    • Job title, duties, work location
    • Salary and payment schedule
    • Working hours and overtime policy
    • Holiday entitlement (minimum 28 days including bank holidays)
    • Notice periods (statutory minimum 1 week after 1 month service)
    • Pension auto-enrolment notification
    • Disciplinary and grievance procedures
  3. ☐ Register for PAYE (if direct hire):
    • Apply for employer PAYE reference online (HMRC)
    • Set up payroll software (cloud-based for RTI compliance)
    • Obtain employees' P45 forms (from previous employer) or use starter checklist
  4. ☐ Pension auto-enrolment:
    • Choose pension scheme (NEST is government-backed, free to use)
    • Enroll eligible employees (age 22+, earning £10,000+)
    • Minimum contributions: 8% total (5% employee, 3% employer)
  5. ☐ Work visa (non-UK/EU citizens):
    • Skilled Worker visa (most common—requires sponsorship license)
    • Global Business Mobility visa (intra-company transfers)
    • Timeline: 3-8 weeks, employer must be licensed sponsor

Phase 3: Ongoing Compliance (Monthly/Quarterly)

  1. ☐ Payroll processing (monthly or more frequent):
    • Calculate gross pay, PAYE, employee NIC, employer NIC, pension contributions
    • Submit Full Payment Submission (FPS) to HMRC on or before payday via RTI
    • Pay HMRC (PAYE + NIC combined payment) by 22nd of following month (19th if paying by post)
    • Provide payslips to employees (electronic acceptable)
  2. ☐ Monitor PE risk (quarterly):
    • Has employee's role changed? (new contract authority, client-facing expansion)
    • Is work location still personal home/hot-desk? (no fixed place emergence)
    • Are UK operations expanding? (more employees, higher revenue)
  3. ☐ Review 2026 DAPE rules (quarterly for sales/BD roles):
    • Do UK employees "play principal role" in contract negotiation?
    • If yes, transition to EOR or establish UK entity

Phase 4: Annual Compliance (Year-End)

  1. ☐ P60 forms: Provide to all employees by May 31 (summary of pay and deductions for tax year)
  2. ☐ P11D forms: Report taxable benefits (company cars, private medical insurance) by July 6
  3. ☐ Corporation Tax return (if UK PE exists):
    • File CT600 within 12 months of accounting period end
    • Include PE profit attribution calculations
    • Transfer pricing documentation (if PE transacts with parent)
  4. ☐ Pension scheme duties:
    • Re-enroll eligible employees every 3 years
    • Submit annual pension scheme return
  5. ☐ Employment law updates:
    • Review UK employment law changes (minimum wage adjustments, statutory pay rates)
    • Update employee handbook and policies

Phase 5: Off-Boarding (When Employee Leaves)

  1. ☐ Notice period:
    • Probation: 1 week minimum (often 2-4 weeks in contracts)
    • After 1 month service: 1 week minimum
    • After 2 years service: 1 week per year (up to 12 weeks)
  2. ☐ Final payroll:
    • Process final salary, accrued holiday pay, deductions
    • Submit final FPS (RTI) marking employee as leaver
    • Provide P45 (employee needs for tax records and next employer)
  3. ☐ Pension cessation: Notify pension scheme of employee leaving
  4. ☐ Exit interview (optional but recommended): Document reasons for leaving
  5. ☐ Return of company property: Laptop, access cards, etc.

Red Flags: Seek Professional Advice Immediately

  • 🚨 Received HMRC enquiry letter about PE status
  • 🚨 UK employee's role expanded to contract negotiation (DAPE risk under 2026 rules)
  • 🚨 Employee requests home office allowance or to use home address on business cards
  • 🚨 Hiring 3+ UK employees without EOR or UK entity
  • 🚨 UK revenue exceeds £2M annually
  • 🚨 Contractor classified as employee by client (IR35 determination)
  • 🚨 PAYE/RTI submissions missed or late (penalties compound quickly)

Recommended UK Advisors

  • Big 4 accounting firms: PWC UK, EY UK, Deloitte UK, KPMG UK (£15K-£50K for PE advice and structuring)
  • Mid-tier: BDO UK, Grant Thornton UK, RSM UK (£8K-£25K)
  • Boutique UK tax specialists: Blick Rothenberg, Saffery Champness, HW Fisher (£5K-£15K)
  • Employment law: Lewis Silkin, Clyde & Co, DLA Piper (for UK employment contracts and compliance)

Key Dates to Remember (2026/27 Tax Year)

  • April 6, 2026: Start of 2026/27 tax year (new rates/thresholds apply)
  • May 31, 2027: P60 deadline (provide to employees)
  • July 6, 2027: P11D deadline (report benefits)
  • July 31, 2027: Online self-assessment tax return deadline (if filing for 2025/26)
  • January 31, 2028: Pay any tax owed for 2026/27 tax year
💡

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Frequently Asked Questions

Does hiring one remote employee in UK create permanent establishment?

It depends on the employee's role and work setup. If the employee works from their personal home without company control (no home office allowance, no company-provided furniture, home address not on business materials) and doesn't negotiate contracts, PE risk is low. However, under the updated 2026 DAPE rules, if the employee plays the 'principal role' in contract negotiations (even without signing authority), PE can be created. The safest approach is using an Employer of Record like Deel, which eliminates PE risk entirely.

What are the 2026 DAPE rule changes in the UK?

Effective January 1, 2026, UK adopted updated dependent agent permanent establishment (DAPE) rules following OECD BEPS Action 7. Previously, DAPE required an agent with formal authority to conclude contracts. Now, DAPE is created if a person 'habitually plays the principal role leading to the conclusion of contracts'—even if someone else signs. This significantly expands PE risk for sales, business development, and account management roles where UK employees negotiate deals with clients.

How much is UK corporation tax on permanent establishment profits?

UK corporation tax for 2026 is tiered: 19% on profits up to £50,000 (Small Profits Rate), gradually increasing to 25% on profits above £250,000 (Main Rate). Non-resident companies with UK PE and tax treaty protection may qualify for the Small Profits Rate. Without treaty protection, non-residents pay 25% regardless of profit level. Additionally, employer National Insurance contributions of 15% apply to UK employee earnings above £5,000/year.

Does a home office create PE in the UK?

Generally no, according to HMRC guidance (INTM261010). If the employee uses their personal home office without company control, PE risk is low. However, PE risk increases if: (1) the home address appears on contracts, website, or business cards, (2) company pays home office allowance or provides furniture, (3) regular client meetings held at home, or (4) company requires employee to work from that specific location. The key test is whether the home office is 'at the disposal of the enterprise.'

Can I classify my UK worker as an independent contractor to avoid PE?

This is risky due to UK IR35 rules (off-payroll working legislation). If HMRC deems the contractor to be an employee in disguise, you face retroactive PAYE and National Insurance liability (up to 6 years), plus penalties up to 100% of unpaid tax. Contractor classification works only if the worker: has multiple clients, provides own equipment, bears financial risk, can send substitutes, and isn't integrated into company operations. Use HMRC's Check Employment Status for Tax (CEST) tool to assess risk.

Does using a coworking space create PE in the UK?

It depends on the membership type. Hot-desking (no assigned seat) creates very low PE risk—insufficient permanence and no fixed place of business. Fixed desk membership for 12+ months creates moderate-to-high PE risk, as it meets the permanence and 'at disposal' tests. Private office lease creates immediate PE. HMRC's position is that coworking arrangements are assessed case-by-case based on degree of permanence and whether business is actually 'carried on' at the location.

What is HMRC's COVID-19 guidance on permanent establishment?

HMRC's INTM261010 guidance (still in effect in 2026) states that 'exceptional and temporary' remote work due to COVID-19 doesn't automatically create PE. Short-term arrangements (typically under 6-12 months) caused by pandemic circumstances are viewed flexibly. However, this guidance applies to genuinely temporary situations—not permanent remote hiring post-COVID. If remote work becomes permanent (18+ months) or employee gains contract authority, normal PE rules apply.

How do HMRC discover foreign companies with UK permanent establishment?

Common discovery methods include: (1) PAYE/RTI filings showing UK employee working for foreign entity, (2) periodic audits of coworking providers (WeWork, Regus) to identify foreign companies, (3) cross-border information exchange under OECD Common Reporting Standard, (4) client vendor compliance reviews asking about PE status, (5) employee personal tax returns showing foreign employer, (6) LinkedIn profiles and public materials showing UK operations, and (7) whistleblowers or disgruntled former employees.

Should I use Employer of Record or establish a UK company?

For 1-10 employees, Employer of Record (EOR) is more cost-effective and simpler. Deel EOR costs ~£600-£700/month per employee (~£7,200-£8,400/year) with zero setup costs, no PE risk, and full compliance handled. Establishing a UK Limited Company requires £1+ share capital (typically £100), £500-£2,000 formation costs, and £8,500-£28,000/year ongoing compliance. UK Ltd makes sense when hiring 10+ employees, generating £5M+ UK revenue, or making long-term commitment (5+ years). For most companies starting with a few UK hires, EOR is optimal.

What are the penalties for not registering UK permanent establishment?

HMRC penalties include: Late PAYE/RTI filing penalties (£100-£400/month), late payment interest (7.75% in 2026), and tax penalties up to 100% of unpaid tax for deliberate errors. Typical PE settlement includes 18-36 months of retroactive corporation tax (25% of attributed profits), employer NIC (15%), interest charges, and negotiated penalties (often 10-30% of unpaid tax if cooperative). Average settlement costs £50K-£500K depending on scale of operations. Proactive voluntary disclosure significantly reduces penalties.

Do I need a UK work visa sponsorship license to hire UK-based employees?

Only if hiring non-UK/non-EU citizens. UK citizens and Irish citizens have right to work freely. If hiring non-UK citizens, employer must obtain Skilled Worker sponsorship license from UK Home Office (£536-£1,476 application fee, 8-week processing). Sponsorship license allows you to issue Certificates of Sponsorship (CoS) for visa applications. However, if using Employer of Record (EOR), the EOR holds the sponsorship license—you don't need your own. This is another significant advantage of EOR for foreign companies.

What is the UK Employment Allowance and can foreign companies claim it?

Employment Allowance is a £10,500 annual reduction in employer National Insurance liability (increased from £5,000 in previous years). Eligible employers can claim it to offset NIC costs. It's available to most employers, including UK subsidiaries of foreign companies and UK PEs. The previous £100,000 eligibility cap was removed in 2026, making more companies eligible. However, companies where the sole employee is also a director cannot claim it. If using Employer of Record, the EOR claims the allowance and passes the savings to you via reduced fees.

How long does HMRC take to assess permanent establishment cases?

Typical HMRC PE enquiry timeline: (1) Initial enquiry letter asking about UK operations (0-3 months after discovery), (2) information gathering and correspondence (3-9 months), (3) HMRC assessment or negotiation (6-12 months), (4) settlement agreement (12-18 months total). More complex cases involving significant profit attribution disputes or treaty interpretation can take 24-36 months. HMRC generally prefers negotiated settlements over tribunal litigation. Voluntary disclosure before HMRC enquiry can shorten timeline to 3-6 months.

Does the UK Finance Bill 2025-26 change permanent establishment rules?

Yes. Draft legislation expected in Spring 2026 will codify HMRC's PE interpretation into statute, provide clearer profit attribution rules following the OECD Authorised OECD Approach, and formalize the updated DAPE rules effective January 2026. Currently, UK PE determinations rely heavily on OECD Model Tax Convention, tax treaties, and HMRC internal manuals. The new legislation will provide statutory footing, reducing ambiguity but also potentially making PE assessments easier to challenge and defend. Foreign companies should review UK operations in light of the new legislation once published.

What should I do if I receive an HMRC enquiry letter about PE?

Act immediately: (1) Do NOT respond without professional advice—engage a UK tax advisor (Big 4, mid-tier, or boutique firm) experienced in PE matters. (2) Preserve all documentation (employment contracts, payment records, employee role descriptions, correspondence). (3) Assess potential exposure—calculate UK revenue attribution and estimated tax liability. (4) Consider voluntary disclosure if PE was unintentional—HMRC significantly reduces penalties for cooperation. (5) Prepare detailed response addressing HMRC questions with supporting evidence. (6) Implement compliance going forward (EOR or UK entity). Response deadlines are typically 30 days—missing deadlines increases penalties.
Legal Disclaimer: This guide provides educational information about UK permanent establishment concepts and general tax rules. This is NOT legal advice, tax advice, or professional consulting. Created by Daniel, founder of CountryTaxCalc, in partnership with Deel. Information compiled from publicly available legal resources, HMRC guidance, and official publications. UK tax law and HMRC guidance are subject to interpretation, and PE determinations depend on specific facts, circumstances, and evolving regulations. The 2026 DAPE rule changes and Finance Bill 2025-26 draft legislation may significantly affect your situation. Permanent establishment rules have severe financial and legal consequences—errors can result in retroactive tax assessments, penalties, and criminal liability. You MUST consult qualified UK tax advisors, chartered accountants, and legal counsel before making ANY hiring decisions or structuring UK operations. Tax rates, thresholds, legislation, and regulations are subject to change without notice.