How Gift Aid Works for Businesses

Gift Aid is a tax relief scheme that allows UK taxpayers, including companies, to receive tax benefits on donations made to registered charities. For businesses, qualifying donations are deducted from total profits before corporation tax is calculated.

Unlike individual donors (where the charity reclaims the basic rate tax), companies make Gift Aid donations from pre-tax profits. The donation is treated as a charge on income, reducing the company’s taxable profit.

Corporation Tax Relief on Donations

When a company makes a qualifying Gift Aid donation, the amount is deducted from its total profits for the accounting period. This directly reduces the corporation tax bill.

Example

ItemAmount
Company profit before donation£200,000
Gift Aid donation£10,000
Taxable profit£190,000
Corporation tax at 25%£47,500
Tax saving from donation£2,500

The company saves £2,500 in corporation tax (25% of the £10,000 donation). The charity receives the full £10,000 without any further tax reclaim needed, because the donation is made gross (before tax).

Qualifying Conditions

For a donation to qualify for Gift Aid relief, the following conditions must be met:

  • The donation must be made to a registered charity or community amateur sports club (CASC) recognised by HMRC
  • The donation must be a payment of money (gifts of goods, services, or equipment do not qualify as Gift Aid)
  • The donation must not be conditional on the charity purchasing goods or services from the company
  • The company must not receive a benefit in return that exceeds the permitted limits

Permitted Benefits

A company can receive minor benefits from the charity without losing Gift Aid relief, provided the value stays within HMRC limits:

Donation amountMaximum benefit value
Up to £10025% of the donation
£101 to £1,000£25
Over £1,0005% of the donation (capped at £2,500)

If the benefit exceeds these limits, the donation does not qualify for Gift Aid, but it may still qualify as a tax-deductible expense if it meets sponsorship criteria.

Donations vs Sponsorship

It is important to distinguish between charitable donations and commercial sponsorship, as they receive different tax treatments.

Charitable Donation (Gift Aid)

  • Purely philanthropic with no significant commercial return
  • Deducted from total profits as a Gift Aid payment
  • No VAT implications (outside the scope of VAT)

Commercial Sponsorship

  • The company receives advertising, branding, or promotional benefit in return
  • Treated as a normal business expense deductible against trading profits
  • May be subject to VAT if the charity is VAT-registered and the sponsorship is consideration for a supply of services

A company sponsoring a charity event in return for logo placement on materials, tickets, and publicity would normally be treated as sponsorship rather than a Gift Aid donation. Both routes provide tax relief, but through different mechanisms.

Payments to Connected Charities

Special rules apply where the company and charity are connected — for example, where the company controls the charity or they share common trustees or directors.

Gift Aid relief is restricted if the donation exceeds the total of:

  • The amount the charity spends on the company’s products or services during the accounting period
  • Any salary, benefits, or payments the charity makes to the company’s directors or connected persons

This prevents companies from obtaining tax relief through circular arrangements.

Gifts of Assets and Investments

While Gift Aid only applies to monetary payments, separate corporation tax reliefs exist for gifts of certain assets to charity:

  • Shares and securities listed on a recognised stock exchange — the market value at the date of disposal, plus any incidental costs, is deductible from total profits
  • Land and buildings in the UK — the market value plus associated costs is deductible
  • Trading stock — the company can elect to treat the gift as made for nil consideration, removing any profit or loss from the disposal

These reliefs are claimed separately from Gift Aid and are not subject to the same benefit limits.

Timing and Carry-Back Rules

Company Gift Aid donations must be made within the accounting period to be deducted from that period’s profits. Unlike individuals, companies cannot carry back donations to the previous year.

However, if the donation creates or increases a loss, the loss can be carried forward or set against other profits under the normal corporation tax loss relief rules.

Record-Keeping Requirements

Companies claiming Gift Aid relief must keep:

  • Records of each donation, including the date, amount, and recipient charity
  • Evidence that the charity is registered with HMRC for Gift Aid purposes
  • Details of any benefits received from the charity
  • Documentation demonstrating the payment is a genuine donation and not conditional on a return benefit

Payroll Giving as an Alternative

Companies can also facilitate tax-efficient giving through Payroll Giving (also called Give As You Earn). Under this scheme:

  • Employees authorise regular deductions from their gross pay
  • The deductions are passed to a registered Payroll Giving agency, which distributes them to the employee’s chosen charities
  • Employees receive immediate tax relief because the deduction is taken before PAYE is applied
  • No National Insurance relief applies — NI is still calculated on the full salary

Payroll Giving does not provide a corporation tax deduction for the company, but the administrative costs of running the scheme are deductible as a normal business expense.