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SMEs meaning

What does SMEs mean?
In legal practice, SMEs refers to small and medium-sized enterprises—businesses below specified size thresholds—used to determine eligibility for particular legal regimes, reliefs and obligations. It is a descriptive term used across multiple contexts rather than a single universal legal definition. Specific definitions vary by regime: - Company law: the Companies Act 2006 sets thresholds for “small” and “medium-sized companies” that govern accounting, audit and filing exemptions in England & Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. - Tax and subsidies: UK schemes (for example, R&D tax relief and subsidy control) use scheme-specific SME thresholds. Always check the relevant legislation or HMRC/BEIS guidance. - Public procurement and grants: UK and Irish practice commonly relies on the EU SME framework (Recommendation 2003/361/EC) based on employee headcount and financial limits; Ireland applies this EU definition. The term “enterprise” includes companies and, where applicable, partnerships and sole traders. Usage is broadly consistent across England & Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Ireland, but the precise thresholds, look‑through rules for group/linked entities, and aggregation tests differ by statute or guidance. Practitioners should identify the governing regime before relying on SME status.
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View the related News about SMEs

NEWS
UK FCA Consumer Duty: Patchy Perimeter, Conflicting SME Definitions and Data-led Compliance Challenges Ahead of July 2024 Closed-Products Deadline

The duty covers activity involving retail customers; however, for certain firms — such as payment services and e‑money issuers — it also extends to interactions with micro‑enterprises with turnover up to £1m. Where the regulator supervises the provision of financial services to small and medium‑sized enterprises, firms engaging with those SMEs fall under the duty as well. Organisations whose customer bases straddle both sides of the perimeter find compliance more challenging. For such firms, applying the duty consistently across segments can prove especially complicated. A senior official at the FCA commented, on a personal basis, that they were not convinced the existing regulatory boundary is the best possible arrangement, observing that it is uneven and could probably be improved, while emphasising that any change is ultimately for government...

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NEWS
EU law weekly round-up—14 March 2024: AI Act adopted, DMA enforcement, DORA RTS, MiFID II amendments, consumer protection, data protection decisions, and environmental/energy initiatives

In this issue: EU fundamentals Commercial Data protection and cybersecurity Free movement, immigration and employment Financial services Energy Environment IP Life sciences Regulatory TMT Daily and weekly news alerts New and updated content Trackers EU fundamentals European Commission releases March 2024 infringements package The European Commission has unveiled its March 2024 infringements package, highlighting EU Member States it is pursuing for breaches of EU law. It is sending letters of formal notice, issuing reasoned opinions and making referrals to the Court of Justice against Member States including Germany, Spain, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Slovenia, Ireland, Greece, Italy, Hungary, Portugal, Romania, Slovenia, Sweden, Finland, Latvia, Luxembourg, Poland, Netherlands and Croatia, for infringements spanning the environment, internal market, industry, entrepreneurship and small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), migration, home affairs and security union, justice, energy and climate, and mobility and transport. See: LNB News 13/03/2024 51. Council of the EU allows EU to...

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NEWS
EU law weekly briefing: key consultations, rulings and policy updates on competition, GDPR, CSRD/ESRS, Taxonomy, climate targets, AI Act, financial services, sanctions and trade defence — 13 November 2025

In this issue: Commercial Competition Corporate Data protection and cybersecurity Free movement, immigration and employment Financial services Energy Environment Life sciences Regulatory TMT International trade Daily and weekly news alerts New and updated content Trackers Commercial Commission consults on evaluation of market surveillance regulation The European Commission has launched a consultation to assess and, if needed, update the Market Surveillance Regulation (EU) 2019/1020. It aims to strengthen the operation of the single market by boosting compliance with EU product harmonisation rules, with any amendments scheduled for Commission adoption in Q3 2026. The consultation closes on 4 February 2026. See: LNB News 12/11/2025 22. Commission consults on New Legislative Framework revision The Commission’s Directorate-General for Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship and SMEs (DG GROW H4) has opened a consultation to underpin the revamp of the New Legislative Framework (NLF) governing product law, seeking to capture stakeholder views on...

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View the related Practice Notes about SMEs

PRACTICE NOTES
UK corporation tax: qualifying R&D expenditure for SME relief and RDEC (accounting periods beginning before 1 April 2024), including subcontracting, staffing, software/data/cloud and subsidy rules

Qualifying R&D expenditure (pre-1 April 2024) This Practice Note sets out the scope of qualifying expenditure for two R&D relief schemes, each subject to detailed commencement and transitional provisions: the research and development relief for small or medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) for accounting periods beginning before 1 April 2024—see Practice Notes: SME R&D relief—additional deduction (pre-1 April 2024) and SME R&D relief—tax credit (pre-1 April 2024); and the R&D expenditure credit scheme applying to accounting periods beginning before 1 April 2024—see Practice Note: R&D expenditure credit (pre-1 April 2024). Together, this Practice Note refers to these as the pre-1 April 2024 schemes. For information about the reliefs generally applying to accounting periods beginning on or after 1 April 2024, see Practice Notes: The merged R&D expenditure credit (post-1 April 2024) and Enhanced relief for R&D-intensive loss-making SMEs (post-1 April 2024). For details on what counts as qualifying R&D expenditure for those two post-1 April 2024 schemes, see Practice Note: Qualifying R&D expenditure...

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PRACTICE NOTES
UK transfer pricing (pre 1 January 2026): TIOPA 2010 overview—scope, participation, financing ‘acting together’, SME exemptions, documentation and APAs

FORTHCOMING CHANGE relating to UK transfer pricing: At Budget 2025, the government confirmed that it intends to move ahead with a new duty on in‑scope multinationals to submit annual information regarding cross‑border related party transactions and dealings for accounting periods starting on or after 1 January 2027. The detailed rules for the new ‘International Controlled Transactions Schedule’ (ICTS) are expected to be formally issued for technical consultation during spring 2026. A consultation on this measure ran from April through to July 2025. See News Analysis: Budget 2025—Tax analysis—International. This Practice Note reviews the UK transfer pricing rules as they apply to chargeable periods (referred to in this Practice Note for ease and convenience as ‘accounting periods’) commencing before 1 January 2026. Note that the Finance Act 2026 introduced a range of reforms to the UK’s transfer pricing regime, most of which apply for accounting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2026, subject to specified transitional provisions. For wider background on transfer pricing, see Practice Notes: Transfer pricing—what is...

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PRACTICE NOTES
UK SME R&D relief (pre‑1 April 2024): additional deduction—eligibility, notifications, rates, €7.5m cap, RDEC interaction, pre‑trading, claiming and compliance

SME R&D relief—additional deduction (pre-1 April 2024) This Practice Note addresses the principal research and development (R&D) relief for small or medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) for accounting periods beginning before 1 April 2024, subject to transitional provisions. For further detail, see Practice Note: SME R&D relief—tax credit (pre-1 April 2024). For the R&D expenditure credit that applies to periods beginning before 1 April 2024, see Practice Note: R&D expenditure credit (pre-1 April 2024). In this Practice Note, these two are collectively described as the pre-1 April 2024 schemes. For guidance on the schemes of relief for R&D generally applying to accounting periods beginning on or after 1 April 2024, see Practice Notes: The merged R&D expenditure credit (post-1 April 2024) and Enhanced relief for R&D-intensive loss-making SMEs (post-1 April 2024). SME R&D relief—additional deduction Where the relevant conditions are satisfied, an SME company may claim an additional deduction equal to 186% of its qualifying research and development (R&D) expenditure when computing profits chargeable to corporation tax...

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View the related Precedents about SMEs

PRECEDENTS
Restructuring Plan Precedent for SMEs under Part 26A Companies Act 2006 (England and Wales)

BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES COMPANIES LIST (CHD) IN THE MATTER OF [ insert name of the Company ] AND OF THE COMPANIES ACT 2006 BETWEEN [ insert name of the Company ] and the Plan Creditors [ and Members ] (each as defined herein) RESTRUCTURING PLAN (pursuant to Part 26A of the Companies Act 2006) DATED [ insert date ] RECITALS The Company (A) [ Insert name of the Company ] is a [ private ] limited company, registered in [ England and Wales ], bearing company number [ insert company number ] and with its registered office at [ insert address ] (the Company). Purpose of the Restructuring Plan (B) This Restructuring Plan seeks to implement a compromise and arrangement between: [ (i) ] the Company and the Plan Creditors; [ and (ii) the Company and the Members ], so as to remove, lessen, avert, or alleviate the impact of financial difficulties experienced [...

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