Employers must report certain events concerning employment-related securities and options to HMRC each year. This involves two key tasks: registering any new employee share plans or other arrangements with HMRC and submitting returns disclosing any reportable events (or a ‘nil’ return where no report is due). Automatic penalties arise on late submissions, and a penalty of up to £5,000 can be imposed for any material inaccuracies that are careless, or which are not corrected without delay. This article outlines the share plan reporting obligations, how these interact with other employer compliance, and what employers can do now to get ready.
What are the deadlines?
Any share plans or other arrangements involving employment-related securities or options, established during 2021/22 should be registered with HMRC in time for the necessary returns to be filed on or before 6 July 2022.
For new tax-advantaged Save As Your Earn (SAYE) plans, Company Share Option Plans (CSOPs) and Share Incentive Plans (SIPs), late registration without a reasonable excuse can mean that only awards made from 6 April 2022 can qualify for income tax relief. It’s therefore crucial that any such new plans are registered with HMRC by the deadline.
Tax-advantaged Enterprise Management Incentive (EMI) plan registration and option grants must be reported to HMRC within 92 days of options being granted to qualify for tax advantages. In addition, an annual return needs to be filed by the 6 July deadline, albeit this will be a nil return if the only action has been an EMI grant already notified.
Arrangements without UK tax advantages, such as overseas share plans with UK participants (including those with overseas tax advantages), can be registered individually or included under a single registration. Some events outside a formal employee share plan must also be reported and might need to be registered with HMRC as a ‘plan’ (these include one-off share awards, and acquisitions of shares or options on a change of control or other transaction).