Episode 75: The Importance Of Creative Thinking Time
In today’s episode, we’re joined by Guy and Gary who give us a breakdown on what they’ve been up to over the summer months.They discuss some of the...
This year’s Budget didn’t rewrite the rulebook for innovation, but it did introduce several changes that matter for anyone building or backing early-stage and scaling AI companies. Here’s a brief breakdown of some of the key factors with input from Andy Wilson, Tax Director at Ascendis Accountants, one of our key partners.
The biggest structural change for our ecosystem is the expansion of the Enterprise Investment Scheme (EIS) and Venture Capital Trust (VCT) rules.
Confirmed changes:
Why it matters:
These changes will enable more companies to take advantage of these relief and attract investment. The reduction in income tax relief for VCT investments may see a shift away from these into EIS and even SEIS investments.
From 6 April 2026, the rules for EMI share options will be significantly expanded. The employee limit will increase from 250 to 500, the gross assets test will rise from £30m to £120m, and the company-wide option limit will double from £3m to £6m. The maximum option holding period will also extend from 10 to 15 years.
From April 2027, companies will no longer need to notify HMRC when granting an EMI option.
These changes are long overdue. The previous thresholds had not kept pace with the needs of growing companies, meaning many scaleups were unable to use EMI as a tool to attract and retain key talent. Extending the option life to 15 years is also a practical improvement; we’ve seen many cases where options approached their 10-year limit and had to be reissued unnecessarily.
Overall, this is a meaningful upgrade to a scheme that remains one of the most effective ways for high-growth companies to incentivise and keep great people.
The Budget didn’t expand AI or compute funding directly, but it does sit within a broader policy shift - reinforced by the UK Compute Roadmap - that places greater emphasis on national compute, data infrastructure and long-term AI capacity. For AI founders, this is still an important signal: access to compute and GPUs is one of the sector’s biggest early bottlenecks, and stronger policy focus in this area is welcome.
While not a headline-grabber, the ongoing work to streamline R&D funding routes matters.
Founders often face delays and ambiguity in navigating R&D claims and grant opportunities. Any simplification here, paired with Innovate UK’s expanding programmes, is a net benefit - especially for pre-seed and seed-stage AI companies trying to validate IP at speed.
A consistent theme in both policy and wider commentary:
The UK wants more companies to scale here, not just launch here.
For founders
For investors
Thanks to Andy Wilson, Tax Director at Ascendis for his insights in this summary, Ascendis have summarised the key measures in this helpful resource to keep you informed of the latest developments in more detail.
The tax benefits available under S/EIS qualifying investments are dependent on individual circumstances and may be subject to change in the future.
In today’s episode, we’re joined by Guy and Gary who give us a breakdown on what they’ve been up to over the summer months.They discuss some of the...
In today’s episode, we welcome back a very special guest, Peter Willock. Peter is a Coach, Advisor, Podcast Host and Author.
In today’s episode, we welcome a very special guest, Peter Wilcock. Peter is a Coach, Advisor, Podcast Host and Author.