Tax planning · UK · 2025/26

How to legally reduce your Dividend Tax

Dividends are taxed on top of your other income, with their own allowance and rates. UK law gives several legitimate ways to pay less — mostly by sheltering shares and using every allowance. Here they are in plain English, with a tool to show your saving.

The legal ways to cut dividend tax — at a glance

See how much you could save

Enter your dividends and other income, then move some into an ISA or use a second allowance. The tool compares your dividend tax with no planning to your tax with these steps.

Your dividends

£
£
£
You could save up to
£0
Dividend tax with no planning
£0
Dividend tax with these steps
£0

Illustration only, using 2025/26 dividend rates. The joint-ownership figure here applies a second allowance; transferring shares to a lower-rate spouse can save more. Doesn't replace advice. Open the full dividend calculator →

The reliefs, explained simply

Each card tells you what it is, who can use it, and what to watch out for — with a link to the official HMRC guidance.

🎁 The £500 dividend allowance

Everyone

The first £500 of dividends each year is tax-free, on top of your personal allowance. It resets every tax year.

Who: every individual receiving dividends.
Watch out: the allowance has shrunk in recent years — don't assume an old, larger figure.
Official guidance →

🛡️ ISAs & "Bed and ISA"

Investors

Dividends from shares held inside a Stocks & Shares ISA are tax-free, forever. "Bed and ISA" means selling holdings and rebuying them inside an ISA to shelter future dividends and growth.

Who: UK residents, up to £20,000 a year into ISAs.
Watch out: selling to move into an ISA can trigger capital gains tax — plan it around your CGT allowance.
Official guidance →

🪙 Pensions

Everyone

Dividends inside a pension are tax-free. And because dividends stack on top of your other income, paying into a pension can drop your dividends into a lower rate band.

Who: anyone with earnings to contribute.
Watch out: pension money is locked away until pension age.
Official guidance →

💍 Transfer shares to a spouse

Married / civil partners

Transfers between spouses and civil partners are tax-free, so moving shares uses a second £500 allowance and your partner's lower tax band — often the biggest saving for couples.

Who: married/civil partners, living together.
Watch out: the transfer must be genuine — your partner really owns the shares and the dividends.
Official guidance →

📅 Spread across tax years

Investors & directors

Where you control the timing (for example, a company you own), taking dividends across two tax years uses two allowances and can keep you out of a higher band.

Who: anyone who can choose when dividends are paid.
Watch out: a company can only pay dividends from real, retained profit, with proper paperwork.
Official guidance →

⚖️ Salary + dividend mix

Company owners

Owner-directors can blend a modest salary and dividends to lower the combined personal and company tax bill — dividends carry lower rates and no National Insurance.

Who: directors of their own limited company.
Watch out: get the balance and paperwork right — see our corporation tax guide.
Official guidance →

Legal planning vs. illegal evasion

Using allowances and sheltering shares is legitimate. Hiding income or faking transfers is not.

✓ Legal planning
Holding shares in an ISA or pension; genuinely transferring shares to your spouse; spreading dividends across tax years; using your £500 allowance.
✗ Illegal evasion
Not declaring dividends; claiming a transfer to your spouse that didn't really happen; paying "dividends" a company has no profit to support.

Frequently asked questions

How can I pay less tax on dividends?
Use the £500 allowance, hold shares in an ISA or pension where dividends are tax-free, transfer shares to a spouse for a second allowance and lower band, and spread dividends across tax years.
Are dividends in an ISA taxed?
No — dividends inside a Stocks & Shares ISA are completely tax-free, with no limit on growth. You can pay up to £20,000 a year into ISAs.
Does transferring shares to my spouse work?
Yes, if it's genuine. Inter-spouse transfers are tax-free, so it uses a second £500 allowance and your partner's lower band. They must really own the shares and dividends.
Do I have to report dividends?
If dividends outside an ISA are above the allowance you usually report them via Self Assessment (or sometimes through your tax code). Always declare them.

Related

Educational guide — not tax or financial advice. UK dividend tax for 2025/26. Reliefs have conditions and change over time. Whether they apply depends on your circumstances. Always confirm with HMRC and a qualified adviser before acting.