A general partnership is a business structure where two or more people carry on a business together with a view to profit. Each partner shares the profits, losses and management of the business. Unlike a private limited company , a general partnership is not a separate legal entity — the partners are personally liable for the business’s debts.

Key Features

FeatureDetail
Legal statusNot a separate legal entity (in England and Wales)
Minimum partners2
Maximum partnersNo legal maximum
LiabilityUnlimited — each partner is personally liable for all debts of the partnership
FormationAutomatic when two or more people carry on business together
RegistrationNot required at Companies House (but must register with HMRC)
Governing lawPartnership Act 1890 (unless a partnership agreement overrides default rules)

Formation

A general partnership comes into existence automatically when two or more people start trading together. There is no requirement to:

  • Register at Companies House
  • File formation documents
  • Have a minimum capital contribution

However, the partnership must register with HMRC for Self Assessment, and each partner must register individually for income tax.

Business Name

If the partnership trades under a name other than the partners’ surnames, it must comply with the Business Names Act 1985 (now part of the Companies Act 2006, Part 41):

  • Display the partners’ names and an address at the business premises
  • Include the partners’ names on business letters and order forms
  • Certain words (e.g. “Royal”, “British”, “Authority”) require permission to use

Partnership Agreement

While not legally required, a partnership agreement is strongly recommended. Without one, the Partnership Act 1890 default rules apply, which may not suit the partners’ intentions.

Default Rules Under the Partnership Act 1890

MatterDefault Rule
Profit and loss sharingEqual shares, regardless of capital contributed
Capital contributionNo interest paid on capital; no obligation to contribute more
ManagementEvery partner has equal right to manage the business
New partnersRequire unanimous consent
DrawingsNo partner entitled to salary or remuneration
DissolutionAny partner can dissolve the partnership by giving notice
ExpulsionNo power to expel a partner (unless agreed)

What a Partnership Agreement Should Cover

  • Profit and loss sharing ratios (may differ from equal splits)
  • Capital contributions and interest on capital
  • Partner drawings and salaries
  • Decision-making procedures (unanimous or majority)
  • Admission of new partners
  • Retirement and expulsion provisions
  • Dispute resolution mechanisms
  • Non-compete and confidentiality clauses
  • Dissolution triggers and procedures

Unlimited Liability

The most significant characteristic of a general partnership is unlimited liability:

  • Each partner is jointly and severally liable for all debts of the partnership
  • A creditor can pursue any individual partner for the full amount owed, even if that partner had nothing to do with the debt
  • Partners’ personal assets (house, savings, car) are at risk
  • Liability extends to debts incurred by any partner acting within their authority

This contrasts with a limited liability partnership , where partners’ liability is limited to their capital contribution.

Taxation

A general partnership is tax-transparent — the partnership itself does not pay tax. Instead, each partner pays income tax on their share of the profits:

Partnership Tax Return

  • The nominated partner must file a partnership tax return (form SA800) with HMRC
  • The return shows the total partnership income and how it is allocated among partners
  • Each partner then includes their share on their personal Self Assessment tax return (form SA100)

Individual Partner Taxation

TaxHow It Applies
Income taxEach partner’s share is taxed at their marginal rate (20% / 40% / 45%)
National InsuranceClass 2 (flat rate) and Class 4 (percentage of profits)
Capital gains taxCharged individually on disposal of partnership assets

Tax Advantages and Disadvantages

FactorPartnershipLimited Company
Tax on profitsIncome tax at marginal rateCorporation tax at 25% (or 19% small profits rate)
Extracting profitsAutomatic — profits belong to partnersRequires salary or dividends
NICClass 2 + Class 4 on profitsEmployer + employee Class 1 on salary only
Loss reliefCan offset against personal incomeLimited company loss rules apply

Partner Duties

Each partner owes fiduciary duties to the other partners, including:

  • Duty of good faith — act honestly in all partnership dealings
  • Duty to account — disclose all profits from partnership activities
  • Duty not to compete — not to carry on a competing business without consent
  • Duty of disclosure — share all information relevant to the partnership

These duties exist by default under the Partnership Act 1890 and are similar to (but separate from) the director duties that apply in limited companies.

Partnership Accounting

Partnerships must maintain proper accounting records . Key accounting features include:

Capital Accounts

Each partner has a capital account recording:

  • Initial and subsequent capital contributions
  • Share of profits or losses
  • Drawings (money withdrawn from the business)
  • Interest on capital (if agreed)

Profit Allocation

At the end of each accounting period, the partnership profit is allocated to partners according to the partnership agreement (or equally if no agreement exists):

StepDetail
1Calculate net profit
2Deduct partner salaries (if agreed)
3Deduct interest on capital (if agreed)
4Allocate remaining profit in the agreed ratio

Financial Statements

Partnerships prepare:

  • Profit and loss account — showing income, expenses and net profit
  • Balance sheet — showing assets, liabilities and partners’ capital
  • Partner appropriation account — showing how profit is divided
  • Current accounts — tracking drawings and profit allocations for each partner

Partnership vs Other Structures

FeatureGeneral PartnershipLimited CompanySole Trader
LiabilityUnlimited (joint and several)Limited to share capitalUnlimited (personal)
TaxationPartners taxed individuallyCorporation tax on profitsIndividual income tax
FormationAutomaticRegistration at Companies HouseAutomatic
RegulationPartnership Act 1890Companies Act 2006Minimal
Number of owners2+1+ (shareholders)1

Dissolving a Partnership

A general partnership can be dissolved by:

  • Agreement — as set out in the partnership agreement
  • Notice — any partner giving notice to the others (under the Partnership Act 1890)
  • Death or bankruptcy of a partner (unless the agreement provides otherwise)
  • Court order — if continuing the partnership would be unjust
  • Illegality — if the partnership’s activities become unlawful

On dissolution, the partnership’s assets are used to pay debts, and any surplus is divided among the partners according to their entitlements.