Tax treatment of company website and software costs

For startups, tech companies, and digital agencies, understanding the tax treatment of website and software costs is essential. Get it wrong, and you could delay tax relief or miss out on valuable deductions. Get it right, and you can improve cash flow and reduce your tax bill.

This article breaks down how HMRC approaches the tax treatment of website and software costs, and what your business should be doing in practice.

Tax treatment of company website and software costs

Why the Tax Treatment of Website and Software Costs Matters

The key issue is whether your costs are capital or revenue. This determines how quickly you receive tax relief.

Put simply, you should consider the nature and purpose of the cost. More importantly, ask whether the expense creates an enduring benefit for your business. This will be done by reference to the nature of the expenditure and the function the website or software performs within your business.

  • Capital expenditure usually creates a lasting asset.
  • Revenue expenditure supports day-to-day operations.
  • HMRC often treats assets lasting at least two years as of enduring benefit.

For fast-growing startups and agencies investing heavily in tech, this distinction can have a significant cash flow impact

Although no strict rule exists, this two-year benchmark provides a strong indicator. You can explore HMRC guidance here for further insights..

Purchased Software: Getting the Tax Treatment Right

The tax treatment of website and software costs often depends on how the software is acquired.

Subscription or SaaS models

Most modern startups use SaaS tools (e.g. CRM systems, design platforms, analytics tools). These are typically:

  • Treated as revenue expenditure
  • Fully deductible as ongoing business expenses
  • One-off software purchases

If you buy software outright:

  • A useful life over two years → likely capital expenditure
  • With a shorter lifespan → may still qualify as revenue

For tech companies purchasing proprietary systems or platforms, this distinction is particularly important.

Internally developed software: (Common in Tech & Startups)

If you're building your own platform, app, or internal systems, the tax treatment of website and software costs becomes more nuanced.

To support capital treatment, you should:

  • Define a clear development project (e.g. app build, platform launch).
  • Evidence technical objectives and outcomes.
  • Track directly attributable costs.

Typical treatment is as follows:

  • Capital: developer salaries (where directly attributable), external development costs.
  • Revenue: bug fixes, small updates, ongoing iterations.

For startups scaling a product, this distinction is critical — especially if you later rely on R&D tax relief or investor due diligence.

Website costs - Capital v Revenue

For agencies building websites for clients — or startups investing in their own platforms — the tax treatment of website and software costs depends on what the website actually does.

  • The nature of the expenditure.
  • The function the website performs for the business.

HMRC compares websites to shop windows, which provides a helpful analogy. “The cost of constructing the window is capital; changing displays is revenue.”

Therefore, you should assess both the function and longevity of your company's website.

Capital website costs often include:

  • Initial website build and platform development.
  • Backend systems and functionality (e.g. booking engines, portals).
  • Domain name acquisition.

Conversely, revenue costs typically include:

  • Content creation and updates.
  • UX/UI tweaks and redesigns.
  • Hosting, maintenance, and support.

For digital agencies, correctly categorising internal development vs client work is especially important.

Intangible assets regime: Key for Tech Businesses

Many startups and tech companies fall within the intangible assets regime, which directly affects the tax treatment of website and software costs.

The regime applies where the asset:

  • Is capital in nature.
  • Appears as an intangible asset in your company's accounts.
  • Was created or acquired on or after 1 April 2002

Why this matters

If it applies:

  • Tax relief generally follows your accounts (amortisation/impairment).
  • This can spread relief over several years

Planning opportunity

You may choose to:

  • Elect out of the regime to claim capital allowances (e.g. AIA for 100% upfront relief).
  • Optimise timing of tax deductions — particularly valuable for early-stage companies.

You would normally consider this where claiming capital allowances would provide faster relief than claiming the amortisation or impairment recognised in the profit and loss account. 

For example, a claim for Annual Investment Allowance would provide 100% relief compared to an asset being written down over its useful life

R&D Tax Relief: A Major Opportunity

Many businesses overlook how the tax treatment of website and software costs interacts with R&D tax relief.

You may qualify if:

  • You are developing new or improved software..
  • You are solving technical challenges or uncertainties

This is especially relevant for:

  • SaaS startups.
  • Product-led tech companies.
  • Agencies developing innovative tools or platforms.

In some cases, the same development costs may fall under both capital treatment and R&D relief, requiring careful handling

Practical Tips for Startups and Agencies

To optimise the tax treatment of website and software costs, you should:

  • Keep clear project documentation for development work.
  • Separate capital vs revenue costs from the outset.
  • Track developer time and project allocation.
  • Review whether the intangible assets regime applies.
  • Consider R&D tax relief alongside your tax position.

Summary

For startups, tech companies, and agencies, the tax treatment of website and software costs is more than a compliance issue — it’s a strategic opportunity.

Handled properly, it can:

  • Accelerate tax relief.
  • Improve cash flow.
  • Strengthen your financial position for growth or investment.

Handled poorly, it can delay relief or create issues with HMRC. If your business is investing heavily in digital infrastructure or product development, it’s worth getting this right from the start.

For more useful information, check out our Ebooks here.

And if you'd like to know how we can help you with all of this, or with anything else, feel free to give us a call on 01202 048696 or email us at [email protected].

Alternatively, please feel free to complete our Business Questionnaire here.

About the author

Richard Baldwyn

I’ll help you legally pay less tax, using insider knowledge gained from my time as a former tax inspector—insight most accountants simply don’t have. More about Richard and the TFA team

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