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The convergence of Finance Act 2026 provisions and newly published FCA priorities for 2026/27 has created the most significant shift in the UK deal landscape in years, requiring every finance act UK M&A team to reassess tax structuring, covenant drafting and regulatory compliance in live and pipeline transactions. The Finance Act 2026, current as of 13 May 2026, introduces changes to interest deductibility limits, anti-avoidance provisions and corporate reliefs that directly alter purchase-price modelling and debt-push-down economics. Simultaneously, the FCA Annual Work Programme 2026/27, published on 26 March 2026, signals heightened supervisory scrutiny of consumer investments, wholesale market conduct and open finance, themes that will ripple through capital-raising documents and disclosure obligations for months to come.
This article provides a practical, checklist-driven playbook for CFOs, general counsel, private equity sponsors and restructuring advisers who need to act now.
Below is a prioritised action list organised by urgency. Treat this as a stop-gap briefing note for your next investment committee, board meeting or lender call.
Within 30 days:
Within 60 days:
Within 90 days:
The Finance Act 2026 received Royal Assent and is current to 13 May 2026. For transaction professionals, the following provisions carry the greatest deal-level impact.
Interest deductibility and the corporate interest restriction (CIR). Finance Act 2026 tightens the fixed-ratio rule for groups with net interest expense above the existing threshold, reducing the percentage of tax-EBITDA that can be deducted. For leveraged buyouts and debt-push-down structures, the practical effect is a direct increase in the after-tax cost of acquisition debt. Sponsors must remodel leverage capacity and bid pricing accordingly.
Anti-avoidance provisions. The Act extends targeted anti-avoidance rules (TAARs) to certain intra-group reorganisation reliefs, closing arrangements where companies previously claimed stamp duty and capital gains reliefs on pre-sale hive-downs or demergers that lacked genuine commercial purpose. Deal teams structuring pre-completion reorganisations should obtain fresh tax opinions before relying on inherited planning.
Corporate reliefs and group loss allocation. Amendments to the group relief surrender rules alter the mechanics for computing surrenderable losses within groups that include entities subject to the Pillar 2 top-up tax. The interaction between domestic group relief and the multinational top-up tax framework introduces new modelling complexity for cross-border acquirers.
Capital allowances. Full expensing for qualifying plant and machinery expenditure is confirmed going forward, but the Act introduces sector-specific caps for certain asset-heavy industries. Acquirers of infrastructure or manufacturing targets should verify whether post-completion capex plans remain eligible for full expensing under the revised rules.
Most provisions take effect for accounting periods beginning on or after 1 April 2026. However, several anti-avoidance measures apply to arrangements entered into on or after the date of introduction of the Finance Bill (which preceded Royal Assent). Transitional provisions exist for groups that have already submitted CIR returns for the current period. The Tax Information and Impact Notes (TIINs) published alongside the Act provide clause-by-clause guidance on commencement dates.
| Change | Who It Affects | Immediate Action |
|---|---|---|
| Tighter CIR fixed-ratio rule | Leveraged acquirers, PE sponsors, any group with net interest expense above threshold | Re-run debt capacity models; adjust bid pricing and financing terms |
| Extended TAARs on reorganisation reliefs | Sellers structuring pre-sale hive-downs, demergers, or intra-group transfers | Obtain fresh tax opinions on pre-completion steps; update disclosure schedules |
| Pillar 2 interaction with group relief | Cross-border groups, international acquirers with UK subsidiaries | Model surrenderable losses under new rules; assess Pillar 2 top-up tax exposure |
| Sector-specific capital allowance caps | Infrastructure, manufacturing and asset-heavy targets | Verify capex eligibility; adjust post-acquisition investment assumptions |
| Anti-avoidance (retrospective element) | Any party to arrangements entered into after Finance Bill introduction date | Audit pipeline transactions for exposure; seek clearance where available |
The FCA Annual Work Programme 2026/27, published on 26 March 2026, sets out the regulator’s supervisory and enforcement priorities. For deal teams involved in capital raising UK transactions, acquisitions of regulated entities, or liability management exercises touching retail investors, the following themes matter most.
Consumer investments. The FCA has signalled intensified scrutiny of how investment products are marketed to retail consumers, with a particular focus on value assessments, disclosure quality and product governance. Capital raises that involve retail-facing securities or fund structures should expect closer supervisory attention to prospectus disclosures and consumer-outcome evidence.
Wholesale market conduct. Enhanced surveillance of market abuse, insider dealing and transaction reporting remains a top enforcement priority. Industry observers expect deal teams to face more frequent supervisory queries around information barriers, market-sounding procedures and pre-announcement trading patterns, particularly in contested M&A situations.
Open finance. The FCA’s Open Finance Roadmap, published in April 2026, outlines a phased approach to extending open banking principles into savings, investments and pensions data-sharing. The likely practical effect for M&A and capital-raising transactions will be greater due-diligence scrutiny of a target’s data-sharing infrastructure, consumer consent frameworks and API readiness.
Enforcement posture. The FCA has committed to faster, more outcome-focused enforcement action. Commentary from leading law firms highlights that regulated firms involved in transactions should assume that any compliance weakness identified during a deal process could trigger a standalone enforcement inquiry.
The FCA’s programme indicates phased implementation throughout FY 2026/27. Early indications suggest the regulator will issue thematic reviews and targeted data requests in Q3 and Q4 2026, particularly focused on consumer investment product providers and firms offering new digital finance products.
| FCA Priority | Deal Impact | Recommended Evidence for Due Diligence |
|---|---|---|
| Consumer investments & value assessments | Prospectus disclosure; fund documentation; consumer duty compliance for retail raises | Consumer outcomes reporting, value assessment records, product governance minutes |
| Wholesale market conduct | Information barrier adequacy in M&A; market-sounding logs; transaction reporting accuracy | Compliance monitoring reports, market-sounding records, personal account dealing logs |
| Open finance readiness | Target valuation for fintechs and data-rich platforms; API infrastructure quality | Data-sharing consent records, API audit trail, open-finance compliance roadmap |
| Enforcement acceleration | Increased risk of enforcement action discovered during DD affecting deal timeline or pricing | Regulatory correspondence file, FCA visit reports, remediation action plans |
Beyond the headline corporate tax measures in the Finance Act 2026, deal teams must also account for UK M&A tax changes affecting the investor base and the mechanics of obtaining tax certainty on complex transactions.
The ISA amendments 2026, published on 9 March 2026, expand the range of qualifying investments that can be held within an ISA wrapper and adjust eligibility rules for innovative finance ISAs. For capital-raising teams, this widens the potential retail investor pool for certain debt and equity instruments. Product teams should review whether their securities now qualify for ISA inclusion and update marketing materials accordingly. The change also affects the demand assumptions in book-building models for retail tranches.
HMRC and HM Treasury have confirmed that the tax certainty service 2026 will launch in July 2026. This service will provide binding advance rulings on the tax treatment of qualifying transactions, including M&A structures, reorganisations and capital-raising arrangements. The likely practical effect will be a significant shift in deal timetables: sponsors and corporates pursuing complex transactions should begin preparing ruling requests now, aiming to submit within the first weeks of the service window. Early engagement is expected to reduce execution risk and improve bid certainty on leveraged transactions where tax deductibility is marginal.
Consider a private equity sponsor acquiring a UK-headquartered manufacturing company at an enterprise value of £250 million, funded with £150 million of senior debt. Under the pre-2026 CIR rules, assume 30 per cent of tax-EBITDA was deductible net interest. If the Finance Act 2026 reduces the fixed-ratio percentage, the sponsor’s annual tax shield on acquisition debt falls materially.
Suppose the revised ratio reduces the deductible interest by £2 million per annum. Over a five-year hold period, that represents a cumulative £10 million reduction in tax benefit. Discounted at a 10 per cent cost of equity, the net present value impact on equity returns is approximately £6.2 million, a meaningful reduction in the sponsor’s returns analysis and a direct input into bid pricing. The sponsor should: (a) remodel the base case with revised CIR assumptions, (b) test whether the group-ratio alternative under existing rules provides a better outcome, and (c) factor the tax certainty service into the deal timetable so that any marginal deductions are confirmed before signing.
The regulatory and tax changes summarised above have immediate drafting consequences for transaction documents. Below is a practical checklist for deal lawyers, corporate finance advisers and in-house counsel working on finance act UK M&A transactions in the current environment.
Lenders and borrowers should revisit financial covenant definitions in credit agreements and bond indentures. Key adjustments include:
For companies facing balance-sheet stress or seeking to optimise their capital structure in light of the 2026 changes, liability management UK options must be evaluated afresh. The interaction between Finance Act 2026 tax rules and FCA conduct obligations shapes both the menu of available actions and the risk profile of each.
Consent solicitation. A bondholder vote to amend terms, such as extending maturity, adjusting coupon, or waiving covenants, remains the fastest soft-touch option. Post-2026, deal teams should ensure that the tax consequences of any modified terms (particularly where the modification triggers a deemed disposal for tax purposes) are modelled under the new Act.
Exchange offer. Swapping existing debt for new securities (debt-for-debt or debt-for-equity) raises shareholder dilution issues and may require shareholder approval. Under Finance Act 2026, the tax treatment of the exchange, including any deemed gain or loss and the availability of rollover relief, must be re-verified against the extended anti-avoidance provisions.
Open-market buyback. Purchasing outstanding bonds in the secondary market is operationally straightforward but carries market abuse risk. The FCA’s 2026/27 emphasis on wholesale market conduct means that buyback programmes must be accompanied by robust compliance monitoring and disclosure protocols.
| Type of Liability Action | Typical Timeline | Primary Regulatory / Stakeholder Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Consent solicitation (bondholder vote) | 4–8 weeks | Bondholder dissent risk; listing rules; potential FCA interest if retail bondholders impacted |
| Exchange offer (swap debt for equity) | 6–12 weeks | Shareholder dilution; shareholder approval; tax consequences under Finance Act 2026 rules |
| Open-market buyback | 2–6 weeks | Market disclosure obligations; insider dealing and market abuse rules under heightened FCA surveillance |
Where liability management alone is insufficient, companies may need to pursue formal corporate restructuring UK processes, including schemes of arrangement under Part 26 or Part 26A of the Companies Act 2006, or company voluntary arrangements (CVAs). The Finance Act 2026 introduces considerations for restructuring professionals: tax losses arising from debt write-downs may be subject to revised anti-avoidance scrutiny, and groups emerging from restructuring must re-establish their CIR position under the new fixed-ratio rules from the first post-restructuring accounting period.
A practical mid-market scenario illustrates the sequencing. A company with £80 million in outstanding high-yield bonds and deteriorating EBITDA coverage might pursue: (1) an initial consent solicitation to waive financial covenants and buy time (4–6 weeks); (2) a parallel exchange offer to convert a portion of debt into equity (6–10 weeks); and (3) if these soft options fail, a Part 26A restructuring plan to cram down dissenting creditors. At each stage, the deal team must model the Finance Act 2026 tax implications, particularly the treatment of any gain arising on debt modification or cancellation, and prepare FCA disclosure evidence if retail bondholders are involved.
The combined effect of the Finance Act 2026 and FCA priorities 2026 is a higher regulatory evidence burden on both buy-side and sell-side deal teams. Assembling a comprehensive evidence pack early in the transaction process reduces execution risk and strengthens negotiating position.
| Timeframe | Action | Responsible Role |
|---|---|---|
| Days 1–30 | Re-run tax models; audit SPA warranties; distribute regulatory change summary | CFO, Tax Lead, GC |
| Days 31–60 | Reassess capital-raising structures; update disclosure letters; engage lenders on covenants | Corporate Finance Lead, Sponsor, Lenders |
| Days 61–90 | Prepare tax certainty service submissions; conduct FCA readiness review; update data rooms | Tax Lead, Compliance, Board |
Ensure that the board receives a formal briefing by day 30, covering both the Finance Act 2026 deal implications and the FCA’s stated enforcement posture for 2026/27.
| Date | Event | Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| 9 March 2026 | ISA amendments published | Expanded qualifying investments; wider retail investor pool for capital raises |
| 26 March 2026 | FCA Annual Work Programme 2026/27 published | Sets supervisory and enforcement priorities for the year; shapes DD expectations |
| April 2026 | FCA Open Finance Roadmap published | Phased data-sharing requirements; due-diligence implications for fintech targets |
| 13 May 2026 | Finance Act 2026, current to this date | All deal-relevant tax provisions in force; check for subsequent statutory instruments |
| July 2026 (expected) | HMRC/HM Treasury tax certainty service launch | Binding advance rulings available; submit early for complex M&A structures |
The 2026 regulatory and legislative cycle demands immediate, coordinated action from every participant in UK M&A, restructuring and capital-raising transactions. The finance act UK M&A implications are not abstract: they affect bid pricing, covenant mechanics, disclosure obligations and deal timetables today. Deal teams that move quickly, updating tax models within 30 days, revising transaction documents within 60 days and positioning for the tax certainty service by day 90, will secure a material advantage over those who wait. The FCA’s parallel escalation of supervisory and enforcement priorities reinforces the need for integrated regulatory and tax planning from the earliest stages of any transaction.
Early preparation, rigorous documentation and specialist advisory input are the clearest path to execution certainty in this new environment.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Odin Partners at Odin Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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