Learning Objectives:
By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:
- Understand the key characteristics of an ordinary partnership.
- Know the tax and financial obligations that apply to each partner individually.
- Understand how management, control and liability are shared between partners.
- Know how to set up a partnership and notify HMRC.
- Weigh up the advantages and disadvantages of this structure.
What is a Partnership?
An ordinary partnership — also called a general partnership — is a formal way for two or more people (or companies) to come together and run a business without creating a separate company. It combines the simplicity of self-employment with the benefit of shared ownership and shared responsibility.
Key characteristics:
- Also known as an Ordinary Partnership.
- Can have two or more partners; a partner does not have to be an individual — it can be a company.
- Partners must designate a Nominated Partner to take the lead in communicating with HMRC.
- Regulated by HMRC.
- No governing document is required, but a formal partnership agreement between partners is strongly recommended.
- Must have a business bank account.
- No registration fee.
Nominated Partner
Partners must choose one person to act as the Nominated Partner. This person is responsible for:
- Notifying HMRC about the partnership arrangement.
- Filing the Partnership Tax Return each year.
- Acting as the main point of contact for HMRC.
Taxation
Each partner pays tax on their individual share of the partnership’s profits. The tax regime is the same as for a sole trader.
- Each partner must file their own annual Tax Return / Self-Assessment.
- Income tax is calculated at the same rates as for a sole trader: Personal Allowance, Basic Rate, Higher Rate, and Additional Rate.
- Each partner is also responsible for their own National Insurance contributions.
- The partnership must register for VAT once combined turnover reaches £85,000.
Management and Control
In an ordinary partnership, there is no legal separation between the business and its owners. All partners share responsibility.
- Partners personally share responsibility for all business debts, losses, liabilities, and legal actions.
- All partners are responsible for financing the business, either equally or on an agreed pro-rata basis.
- Profits must be shared equally or proportionally between partners, as agreed.
- The business is managed jointly by the partners.
- All partners are responsible for maintaining accurate records of all sales, income, and expenses.
Important: In an ordinary partnership, each partner can be held personally liable for the full amount of any business debt or legal claim — not just their own share. This is known as joint and several liability.
Partnership Agreement
Although not legally required, a written partnership agreement is strongly recommended. It should cover:
- How profits and losses are divided.
- What happens if a partner wishes to leave.
- How decisions are made and disputes resolved.
- What happens to the business if a partner passes away.
Note: a partnership ceases to exist if any partner decides to leave, unless the partnership agreement makes provision for this.
Setting Up a Partnership
- Agree on the terms of the partnership, including profit share, roles, and responsibilities.
- Draft a formal Partnership Agreement (strongly recommended).
- Designate a Nominated Partner to manage the HMRC relationship.
- Register the partnership with HMRC. Each partner must also register individually for Self-Assessment.
- Open a dedicated business bank account.
- No registration fee applies.
Advantages
- Low cost to set up.
- Easy to get started.
- Full control retained by the partners.
- Very little financial reporting required.
- Greater potential to raise finance than a sole trader.
Disadvantages
- Each partner has full personal liability for all business debts — not just their own share.
- Heavier tax burden compared to a private limited company.
- May not always be seen as credible by larger corporate clients.
- Can be complex to wind up if partners disagree.
- Ceases to exist when one partner leaves, unless the partnership agreement provides for this.
Reflection
Is a partnership right for your situation? Ask yourself: do you trust your intended partner(s) enough to share full financial liability? Have you discussed what would happen if one person wanted to leave? Would a limited company structure offer better protection for everyone involved?