EMI Schemes – following the 2025 Autumn Statement
- 20 February 2026
- Corporate and M&A
In an economic landscape where attracting, retaining and incentivising key employees is key to commercial success but can be very expensive and risky, if that recognition is through pay and that individual fails to perform or leaves we are seeing many clients seek advice in respect of other means to incentivise and motivate and invariably involves discussion around share options.
In those conversations, many clients raise the subject of EMI (Employee Management Incentives) and ask in the ever changing fiscal landscape are they still of value.
Enterprise Management Incentives (EMIs) are a form of tax efficient share option, for qualifying companies and qualifying employees. As with share options generally, they allow an option holder to acquire an interest in shares on the satisfaction of a qualifying event, such as a business exit or after a period of time.
As with share option schemes generally, EMI’s are seen to be attractive initiatives for a number of reasons, including:
EMI options are tax efficient.
Whether or not a company or employee can qualify under the EMI rules depends on them meeting certain criteria, including;
A number of undertaking types are exempt from EMI, particularly around property companies and financial trading. For those in these sectors, specialist advice ought to be sought.
As long as both the company and the employees satisfy the requirements to be eligible to operate and be allocated EMI options, the company can impose its own restrictions in regard to exercising the option. This can include leaver provisions, performance conditions, and time-based vesting – however the rules provide that options must vest within 10 years of grant.
Given the fiscal landscape and the Government’s drive to raise taxation are EMI’s a thing of the past? Well in short no, in fact in the 2025 Autumn statement the Government amended some of the rules to broaden those who could qualify, including raising the balance sheet cap of £30m to £120m and enabling the EMI pool to swell from £3m to £6m from the start of the 2026/2027 Tax Year.
If you would like support with any of the matters outlined above, reach out to our corporate team.
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Disclaimer
This information is for guidance purposes only and should not be regarded as a substitute for taking legal advice. Please refer to the full General Notices on our website.