Change description : 2025-05-21 10:44:00: What you can claim section updated to include a tool to work out how much creative industries tax expenditure credit you can claim for your production and a tool to work out how to redeem the value of the creative industries expenditure credit you can claim. [Guidance and regulation]
To qualify for creative industry tax reliefs, all films and TV programmes must be certified as British. The film and TV programme must pass a cultural test or qualify through an internationally agreed co-production treaty.
The British Film Institute manages certification and qualification on behalf of the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.
You can claim an expenditure credit based on a percentage of your qualifying costs. Qualifying costs will be the lower of either:
80% of total core costs
the amount of UK core costs
You can claim the following expenditure credit rates:
39% of qualifying expenditure for children’s TV programmes, animated films and animated TV programmes
53% on independent films
34% on all other films and TV programmes
The higher rate for independent films can be claimed from 1 April 2025. It applies to costs incurred from 1 April 2024. Independent films may only claim relief on up to £15 million core costs.
From 1 April 2025 films and TV programmes with a rate of 34% can claim further credit for visual effects costs. Costs incurred from 1 January 2025 are eligible. Visual effects costs have a rate of 39% and are exempt from the 80% cap on total core costs.
Your company’s total expenditure credits for a period are taxed at the main rate of Corporation Tax.
They are then used to pay off your Corporation Tax liability.
They can also be used to pay off other tax liabilities if you have them, or surrendered to group companies.
If you have credit remaining after this, you will receive a payable credit for that amount.
a British cultural certificate from the British Film Institute — if you send an interim certificate, you must send the final certificate after the film is complete and the certificate must be in date when you submit it
statements of the amount of core costs — split between UK and non-UK costs