UK Tax
PAYE (Pay As You Earn)
PAYE (Pay As You Earn) is the UK system for deducting Income Tax and National Insurance from employee wages at source, before payment to the employee.
Every UK employer must operate PAYE, calculating tax and NI on each pay run and remitting to HMRC monthly. PAYE submissions happen in real time through Real Time Information (RTI) — each pay run is reported to HMRC at or before the time of payment. For SaaS and AI startups, PAYE complexity grows with: equity participation (share option exercises trigger PAYE in some cases), benefits in kind (private health, gym memberships, employer-provided equipment), and international employees (UK PAYE for non-UK residents, treatment of overseas workdays). Errors in PAYE filings are one of the most common causes of HMRC contact for early-stage companies.
Performance obligations are the specific promises a company makes to a customer in a contract, each of which triggers revenue recognition when satisfied.
Under both ASC 606 (US) and FRS 102 (UK), revenue recognition is tied to satisfying performance obligations rather than receiving cash. For SaaS contracts, the typical performance obligation is providing ongoing access to the software platform over the subscription period — revenue is recognised evenly across that period. But complex contracts can have multiple performance obligations: software access (recognised over time), implementation services (recognised on completion), training (recognised when delivered), each with separate timing. Identifying and allocating value to performance obligations is one of the most consequential accounting decisions for SaaS businesses.
US-UK Structuring
Permanent Establishment (PE)
A Permanent Establishment (PE) is a fixed place of business or dependent agent in a jurisdiction that creates a tax presence under domestic law and tax treaties.
PE is the threshold concept for whether a foreign company’s activities in a country are sufficient to create taxing rights for that country. Traditional PE definitions include offices, branches, and dependent agents who habitually conclude contracts. Modern interpretations under treaties also consider digital activities, though the rules are still evolving. For SaaS and AI companies, the most common PE risks are: sales personnel based in another country who close deals there, technical staff working from another country, and contractors who effectively operate as part of the company. PE creation can result in unexpected tax filings, transfer pricing requirements, and corporate tax exposure in the other jurisdiction.
The Post-Restructure Stage is reached once the company has already taken a US structural step — commonly a Delaware flip, or a UK holding company with a US subsidiary already operating.
The live questions are what follows the move: transfer pricing, IP migration, intercompany agreements, and defensibility.
Crossing Method
The Pre-Catalyst Stage
The Pre-Catalyst Stage is the earliest point of the UK–US crossing: the company is considering the US but nothing has yet forced the question — no US revenue, no US hires planned, no investor pressure for a US structure, no founder relocation underway.
The work at this stage is framing the questions clearly before any single pressure starts driving decisions.
Prepayments are expenses paid in advance, recorded as an asset on the balance sheet until the corresponding service or benefit is received.
When a company pays for an annual insurance policy upfront, the cash leaves the business immediately but the cost relates to twelve months of coverage. Prepayments accounting holds the unused portion as a current asset, releasing one-twelfth into the P&L each month. The same principle applies to prepaid software licences, rent paid in advance, prepaid professional fees, and reserved capacity payments. For AI companies, prepaid cloud reservations and committed API spend often sit as prepayments — the treatment can be material for understanding actual operating costs vs cash outflows.
FounderUK Tax
PSC Register (Persons of Significant Control)
The PSC Register is the statutory register of Persons of Significant Control that every UK company must maintain and report to Companies House.
A Person of Significant Control is anyone who holds more than 25% of shares, more than 25% of voting rights, the right to appoint or remove the majority of directors, or otherwise exercises significant influence or control over the company. PSC information is publicly accessible on the Companies House register. For startup founders, PSC reporting becomes more complex as investor classes are introduced (preferred shares with super-voting rights), trust structures hold shares, or corporate shareholders are themselves controlled by individuals further up the chain. Maintaining the PSC register accurately is a statutory compliance requirement separate from filing annual confirmation statements.