What creative founders need to know before saying “I do” to another studio.
When two creative agencies decide to join forces, the focus is usually on big ideas: bigger clients, stronger portfolios, shared talent and finally cracking that “we should collaborate more” energy.
But beneath the brand refresh, team intro videos and optimistic Slack channels sits something just as important: tax and accounting consequences.
A merger can unlock huge opportunities, if you structure it properly. Get it wrong, and you risk unexpected tax bills, messy profit splits, and HMRC headaches that could take all the gloss off your new partnership.
Here’s a clear, creative-friendly guide to what actually happens in the numbers when two agencies combine.
In the UK, agencies don’t typically “merge” in the Hollywood sense. Instead, one of these structures is used:
– The acquired company becomes a subsidiary
– Or is later wound up and fully absorbed into the group
– Clients, team, brand, equipment and goodwill transfer across
– Seller usually pays corporation tax on the gain
– Often called a “Newco merger”
– Can be very tax-efficient if structured with share-for-share exchanges
Which route you choose drives the tax outcome, so the accounting discussion starts here.
If you buy the shares of the other agency, there’s no immediate corporation tax impact for the buyer company.
But the selling shareholders may pay Capital Gains Tax (CGT) on their shares (more on that later).
The buyer gets no tax deduction for “goodwill” when buying shares. The goodwill sits in the balance sheet of the acquired company and is not amortisable for tax.
This is usually more favourable for the buying agency from a tax point of view.
You can typically claim:
The selling company pays corporation tax on any profit made on the assets sold, including goodwill.
If you’re buying the trade and assets, the transaction might qualify as a TOGC (Transfer of a Going Concern).
If it qualifies as TOGC:
If it doesn’t qualify:
If the seller has partially exempt work (e.g. music royalties or licensing income) the buyer may inherit that VAT complexity. Worth checking early!
Most agency mergers trigger TUPE (Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment)).
This means:
You’ll also need to budget for:
This is where creative agencies differ from “normal” businesses.
You must map out:
From an accounting standpoint:
Transferred IP sits with the buyer as an intangible asset, with possible tax-deductible amortisation if paid for as part of an asset deal.
When a creative agency is acquired, most of the value often sits in:
This bundle becomes goodwill.
You need a proper valuation otherwise HMRC may challenge it.
If you sell your shares or business:
This is where proper structuring makes a huge difference.
Once merged, the real work begins:
This is why many founders hire an external accountant to run “Integration Month 1” to stabilise the finance operations.
If two founder teams merge, a key decision is:
How will profits be shared going forward?
Options include:
Each option has different tax consequences:
Get this documented properly. Verbal agreements fall apart fast.
Some creative agencies choose to run as a group structure, keeping each brand or subsidiary separate.
Pros:
Cons:
A merger can be game-changing for a creative agency. More talent, more clients, more clarity, more momentum.
But structurally it must be done right.
Get the legal, tax and accounting decisions sorted early, and your merger will feel like a natural evolution, not a stressful reinvention.
If you're even thinking about merging with another agency, you might want to explore:
A tax-efficient merger strategy