What happens when I sell my business?
- Nic Round: Chartered Wealth Manager

- Feb 13
- 3 min read
Updated: 1 day ago

What happens when I sell my business?
In the UK, selling a business is not simply a transaction. It triggers tax consequences, liquidity decisions, investment planning and often a personal transition. What happens after the sale can shape your financial future more than the deal itself.
Behind this question are often deeper concerns:
How much will I keep after tax?
What should I do with the proceeds?
Will I have enough to stop working?
What changes once the business is no longer there?
Understanding the sequence helps reduce uncertainty.
Stage 1 — Completion and tax calculation
After the sale completes:
Sale proceeds are received
Capital Gains Tax is assessed
Relief eligibility is confirmed
Professional fees are settled
If Business Asset Disposal Relief applies, CGT may be 10%.If not, standard rates may apply.
The headline sale price is rarely the net amount retained.
A simple example
Imagine:
Sale price: £3 million
Original cost: £200,000
Gain: £2.8 million
If 10% CGT applies:
Tax: £280,000
Net proceeds: £2.72 million
If 20% CGT applies:
Tax: £560,000
Net proceeds: £2.44 million
The difference may materially affect future planning.
Stage 2 — Holding the proceeds
Immediately after sale, many former owners:
Hold proceeds in cash
Delay investment decisions
Feel uncertain about next steps
This pause is natural.
Large liquidity events often create both relief and anxiety.
Inflation risk begins immediately.But rushing into investment decisions can create regret.
Stage 3 — Income planning
Without the business generating income, attention turns to:
How much annual income is required
How investments should be structured
How long the capital must last
Whether retirement is immediate or gradual
A £2 million portfolio structured for growth behaves differently from one structured for income stability.
Timing matters.
Stage 4 — Estate and legacy planning
Post-sale wealth often increases exposure to:
Inheritance tax
Gifting considerations
Pension planning
Family wealth structuring
Business relief may no longer apply once proceeds are held personally.
Planning often changes after liquidity.
The behavioural layer
Selling a business can feel disorienting.
Common experiences include:
Loss of routine
Identity shift
Fear of mismanaging capital
Pressure to invest quickly
The sale is an event.The transition is a process.
Clarity during this period often prevents structural mistakes.
A more useful question
Rather than asking only:
What happens when I sell my business?
A more grounded question may be:
What financial independence does this sale need to support?
Because the transaction is temporary.The next chapter is long.
Some of the most common practical questions people ask after selling a business are below.
Do I pay tax immediately after selling my business?
Capital Gains Tax is typically due following the tax year in which the sale completes.
Should I invest the proceeds straight away?
There is rarely urgency. Structured planning is usually more important than speed.
Will selling my business affect inheritance tax?
Yes. Business relief may cease to apply once proceeds are held personally.
Can I retire immediately after selling?
That depends on the net proceeds, required income and investment structure.
A calm place to think first
If you are approaching or have completed a sale, the most valuable first step is rarely immediate reinvestment.
Often it is clarity about:
Required annual income
Desired lifestyle
Risk tolerance without business income
Long-term legacy intentions
Evoa exists to provide that quiet thinking space — before advice, before action.



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