This month marks the start of a new era of corporate transparency in the UK. Driven by the Economic Crime & Corporate Transparency Act (ECCT Act), Companies House has begun rolling out the biggest overhaul to business identity verification rules in decades. If you run a creative agency, a production outfit, or a small media business, some of these changes will hit your admin list very soon.
Here’s what you need to know, and what you need to do next.
This is the headline change.
Every director, every Person With Significant Control (PSC), and anyone who files information on behalf of a company will soon need to undergo biometric identity verification.
Some important implications for creative businesses:
Verification will be done either directly with Companies House, or via approved providers such as your accountant.
Action point:
Have your passport or driving licence at the ready and let all directors and significant shareholders of your company know.
If you’re one of those creative entrepreneurs who forms a new company for every project, be aware that:
This finally puts an end to the old days of forming a company in 3 minutes with near-zero checks.
Action point:
If you’re planning to spin up a new company for a new agency brand, production arm, or side project, allow a little extra time for the new checks.
Companies House now has the authority to:
For creative agencies, the most common tripwires will be:
Action point:
Review your statutory records NOW — especially your share register and PSCs — before your next Confirmation Statement.
Registered office addresses must now be “appropriate addresses”, meaning:
For creatives working from shared studios or co-working spaces, be careful:
Action point:
Check that your current registered office meets the new "appropriate address" criteria.
Many creatives operate multiple micro companies:
– personal brand
– agency
– production vehicle
– one-off film project
– merch brand
– digital product side hustle
Companies House changes mean increased scrutiny on:
Action point:
Ask your accountant to review your group of companies so you don’t accidentally fall foul of the new transparency rules.
Creative businesses often rely on speed: set up a brand, launch a project, collaborate quickly, scale fast. But with the new ECCT Act requirements, Companies House is no longer a passive filing cabinet, it’s an active regulator.
You will need:
This isn’t optional. Companies House will be enforcing.
Alongside the transparency and ID-verification changes, Companies House has confirmed that many of its statutory filing fees will increase from 1 February 2026.
Here are the headline fee changes to note for creative businesses:
Why this matters for creative businesses:
Action point:
If you’re planning to form a new company or file a Confirmation Statement in early 2026, consider doing it before 1 February 2026 to lock in the current (lower) fees. Also revisit your company structure now — ask whether each vehicle is serving a clear purpose given the increased cost of maintenance.
We have tools and processes to streamline director and PSC verification, check your statutory records, and keep your compliance tight, so you can focus on running a creative business without the admin headaches.
If you want an early check-up on your statutory filings, just drop us a message.