In a family company, there may be a number of shareholders.
Paying dividends is not as straightforward as paying a salary or a bonus as there are company law rules which must be adhered to. The first point to note is that dividends are paid from retained profits. These are profits on which corporation tax has already been paid, and which have yet to be distributed. A company can only pay a dividend if it has sufficient retained profits from which to pay it.
The second point to note is that where there is more than one shareholder for a class of share, dividends must be paid in proportion to the shareholdings, which can be very limiting and may not give a tax-efficient result. This is where an alphabet share structure comes in.
Under an alphabet share structure, each shareholder has their own class of share, for example, A ordinary shares, B ordinary shares, etc. This allows different dividends to be paid for each class of share, making it possible to tailor the dividends to the shareholder’s personal circumstances. For example, a company may tailor dividends to mop up any unused dividend allowances and basic rate bands.
Example
Albert and Anna are shareholders in A Ltd. They each own 50% of the ordinary share capital.
The company has profits of £50,000 it wishes to distribute. Neither Anna nor Albert have used their dividend allowance. Albert has no other income in 2026/27, whereas Anna has income of £200,000 from her property portfolio.
As Anna and Albert each own 50% of the shares, each will receive a dividend of £25,000. Albert can set his dividend allowance and personal allowance against his dividend so £13,070 is tax-free. The remaining £11,930 is a taxed at 10.75% – a tax bill of £1,282.47. Anna will also receive a dividend of £25,000, of which £500 is sheltered by her dividend allowance. The remaining £24,500 is taxed at 39.35% – a tax bill of £9,640.75. Their combined tax bill is £10,923.22.
If instead they had adopted an alphabet share structure whereby Albert owned one ordinary A share and Anna owned one ordinary B share, they could have tailored the dividends to their personal circumstances. Instead of each receiving a dividend of £25,000, a dividend of £49,500 could be declared for the A share and a dividend of £500 for the B share. Albert would receive a dividend of £49,500 on which tax of £3,916.25 would be payable, while Anna would receive a dividend of £500 which would be sheltered by her dividend allowance. Their combined tax bill is over £7,000 lower where an alphabet share structure is used.
07/05/2026
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