UK Trading Taxes: CGT and Spread Betting
Two UK residents can make identical £20,000 trading profit yet pay very different tax depending on whether they use CGT-exposed instruments or tax-free spread betting.
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UK Trading Taxes: CGT and Spread Betting
Two UK residents can make identical £20,000 trading profit. One pays £4,800 in tax. The other pays nothing. The difference is the instrument.
The UK offers an unusually generous toolkit for private traders — but only if you understand which wrapper you are using.
Capital Gains Tax (CGT)
CGT applies to profits from selling shares, ETFs, and CFDs.
- Annual Exempt Amount (AEA): £3,000 for 2025–26. Gains below this are tax-free.
- Rates (2025–26):
- 18% for basic-rate taxpayers
- 24% for higher and additional-rate taxpayers
Only the gain above the AEA is taxed, and at your marginal band.
Spread betting: the tax-free route
Spread betting is classified as gambling for tax purposes, so for UK residents:
- No Capital Gains Tax on profits
- No Stamp Duty Reserve Tax
- No Income Tax on gains
This is the single most tax-efficient way for a UK resident to trade directional markets. The trade-off: losses are not deductible against other capital gains, and spreads/financing costs are typically wider than CFDs.
Caveat: if the tax authority concludes you are trading as a business rather than as a private gambler, treatment can change. Keep spread-betting activity genuinely personal.
CFDs
CFDs are subject to CGT, not stamp duty. They share spread betting's market access but lose the gambling exemption. Choose CFDs when you need to offset capital losses elsewhere.
Tax wrappers
| Wrapper | Annual limit (2025–26) | Tax treatment |
|---|---|---|
| ISA | £20,000 | All growth and dividends tax-free |
| SIPP | Earnings-linked | Tax relief on contributions; taxed on withdrawal |
| General Investment Account | Unlimited | CGT applies |
An ISA shelters £20,000 of fresh capital per year, growing entirely free of CGT and dividend tax. Maximize it before trading outside any wrapper.
Day trading as a trade
HMRC may treat very active, systematic trading as a trade rather than investment. If so, profits become income taxed at your marginal rate, with losses allowable against other income. The line is blurry; the volume, frequency, and pattern of your activity determine it.
Practical steps
- Maximize your ISA first
- Keep gains below the £3,000 AEA each year where possible
- Track every CFD trade — CGT requires precise cost basis
- Decide between spread betting (tax-free, wider spreads) and CFDs (CGT, tighter spreads) deliberately, not by accident
The UK gives you the tools. Using them is a choice.
Next: cross the Atlantic to see how Canada's TFSA and RRSP accounts shelter gains.
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