FundingPips Payout Tax in the UK: HMRC Guide
If you're pulling payouts from FundingPips and living in the UK, HMRC wants their cut. That much is straightforward. What's less straightforward is exactly how your FundingPips income gets classified, what you can deduct, and whether you need to register as self-employed or can file under miscellaneous income.
I'm not a tax advisor, and this isn't tax advice. This is a practical breakdown of how HMRC generally treats prop firm income based on current guidance, community discussion, and publicly available HMRC resources. If you're earning significant amounts from FundingPips, get a qualified UK accountant who understands trading income. The money you spend on professional advice will save you far more in avoided penalties and optimised deductions.
The Core Question: How Does HMRC Classify FundingPips Income?
HMRC does not have a specific "prop firm" tax category. Your FundingPips payouts need to fit into one of their existing classifications. The two most relevant are:
Trading income (self-employment): This applies when your activity looks like a business—regular, organised, with clear commercial intent and profit motive. Most active funded traders fall here.
Miscellaneous income: This applies when the activity is irregular, casual, and not organised like a business. Possible for traders with occasional small payouts, but less common.
HMRC uses the "Badges of Trade" to determine which category applies. These badges assess factors like frequency of activity, degree of organisation, level of risk, profit motive, and the nature of the transactions. A funded trader who passes evaluations, follows structured rules, trades regularly, and receives consistent payouts ticks most of the Badges of Trade boxes. This points toward trading income and self-employment classification.
Importantly, FundingPips payouts are NOT capital gains. Even though you're "trading," HMRC views prop firm payouts as income from a commercial activity—you're providing a trading service and receiving a profit split. The fact that you're trading simulated (demo) accounts reinforces this: you're not buying and selling assets you own, you're being compensated for performance.
This also means prop firm trading is NOT treated as gambling or spread betting (which are tax-free in the UK). Some traders have argued this point online. The problem: spread betting is tax-free because losses generally exceed profits across all participants, and you're risking your own money. With prop firms, you're risking an evaluation fee and receiving payouts—HMRC is unlikely to accept this as gambling, especially when payouts are regular and substantial.
Do You Need to Register as Self-Employed?
If HMRC classifies your FundingPips income as trading income—which is the most likely outcome for active funded traders—then yes, you need to register as self-employed.
When to register: By 5 October following the end of the tax year in which you received your first payout. If your first FundingPips payout arrives in January 2026 (within the 2025/26 tax year running 6 April 2025 to 5 April 2026), you must register by 5 October 2026.
How to register: Through HMRC's online portal on GOV.UK. You'll receive a Unique Taxpayer Reference (UTR) number—keep it safe, you'll need it for everything.
The £1,000 trading allowance: If your total prop firm payouts are under £1,000 in a tax year, you don't need to register or report. This allowance covers the gross amount (before expenses). Above £1,000, you must register and file a Self Assessment return.
If your activity is genuinely casual (rare payouts, low amounts, not your main trading focus), you might be able to report under miscellaneous income instead. This doesn't require self-employment registration but still requires reporting on your Self Assessment return. However, if you're trading daily and pulling regular payouts, the self-employment route is the safer classification.
How Much Tax Will You Pay?
FundingPips payouts are added to your other income (salary, rental income, etc.) and taxed according to standard UK income tax bands. For the 2025/26 tax year:
Personal Allowance: First £12,570 of total income is tax-free.
Basic Rate (20%): Income from £12,571 to £50,270.
Higher Rate (40%): Income from £50,271 to £125,140.
Additional Rate (45%): Income above £125,140.
If you earn £35,000 from employment and £12,000 from FundingPips payouts in a tax year, your total income is £47,000. The FundingPips income sits in the basic rate band (after your personal allowance is used by your salary), so you'd pay approximately 20% income tax on the trading income, plus National Insurance contributions.
National Insurance: Self-employed traders pay Class 2 NIC (£3.45/week if profits above £12,570) and Class 4 NIC (6% on profits between £12,570 and £50,270, plus 2% above that). These add to your total tax burden.
Deductible Expenses: What Can You Claim?
This is where proper record-keeping pays for itself. As a self-employed trader, you can deduct business expenses from your gross income, reducing your taxable profit.
Commonly deductible prop firm expenses:
Challenge fees — every FundingPips evaluation fee you've paid, whether you passed or failed, is a business expense. If you spent £800 on failed challenges and £289 on the one you passed, that's £1,089 in deductible costs.
Platform costs — the $20 cTrader surcharge, VPS subscription fees, data feed costs.
Education and tools — trading courses, books, charting software subscriptions, TradingView subscription, economic calendar tools.
Home office costs — a proportion of your electricity, heating, internet, and rent/mortgage interest if you trade from home. HMRC allows either a flat rate (currently £6/week without evidence, or the proportion of actual costs based on the room/hours used for trading).
Hardware — computer, monitors, desk, chair used for trading. These can be claimed as capital allowances or under the Annual Investment Allowance.
Professional services — accountant fees, tax advice.
Internet and phone — the business proportion of your internet and mobile phone bill.
Not deductible: Your personal living expenses, non-business clothing, commuting costs (unless to a specific business premises), entertainment.
Keep receipts and records for everything. HMRC can request evidence for any claimed expense. A simple spreadsheet tracking date, amount, description, and category is sufficient for most traders.
Filing Your Self Assessment
Key deadlines for the 2025/26 tax year:
- 5 October 2026: Deadline to register for Self Assessment if not already registered.
- 31 October 2026: Deadline for paper tax returns.
- 31 January 2027: Deadline for online tax returns AND for paying any tax owed.
Payments on account: If your tax bill exceeds £1,000, HMRC may require payments on account—advance payments toward next year's tax bill. These are due 31 January and 31 July.
How to report: On your Self Assessment tax return, if registered as self-employed, your FundingPips income goes in the self-employment section. You'll report total income (gross payouts received), deduct allowable expenses, and the remainder is your taxable profit.
If reporting as miscellaneous income, use the "Other income" section of the return.
Making Tax Digital: What Changes in 2026
From April 2026, sole traders and landlords with combined self-employment and property income over £50,000 must comply with Making Tax Digital (MTD) for Income Tax. This means:
- Keeping digital records using HMRC-recognised software
- Sending quarterly updates of income and expenses to HMRC
- Still filing an annual return by 31 January
If your FundingPips income plus any other self-employment or property income exceeds £50,000, you'll need MTD-compatible accounting software from April 2026. Xero, QuickBooks, and FreeAgent all offer MTD-ready packages.
If your income is below £50,000, MTD isn't mandatory yet—but HMRC plans to extend it to lower thresholds (£30,000 from April 2027, potentially £20,000 from 2028).
Can Failed Challenge Fees Be Deducted?
This is one of the most common questions from UK prop firm traders. You spent £2,000 on FundingPips challenges across the year, but only passed one and earned £5,000 in payouts. Can you deduct the £2,000 in challenge fees?
The answer is generally yes—if your prop firm activity qualifies as a trade for tax purposes. Challenge fees are a direct business cost of generating trading income. Just as a freelancer can deduct the cost of pitches that didn't result in contracts, a prop firm trader can deduct evaluation fees that didn't result in funded accounts.
Keep records of every challenge purchase, including failed ones. Bank/card statements showing the transactions, plus email confirmations from FundingPips, serve as documentation.
Practical Tips for UK FundingPips Traders
Open a separate bank account. While not legally required for sole traders, having a dedicated business account makes tracking income and expenses dramatically easier at tax time.
Record every payout when received. Note the date, gross amount (before FundingPips' fee), net amount received, and exchange rate if converted from USD to GBP (FundingPips pays in USD).
Exchange rate matters. Your payouts arrive in USD but must be reported in GBP. Use the exchange rate on the date of receipt. HMRC publishes official exchange rates, but the rate your bank applies when converting is also acceptable.
Set aside 25-30% of every payout for tax. If you're earning above the basic rate threshold, this percentage increases. It's better to over-reserve than face a surprise tax bill in January.
Get an accountant if you're earning over £10,000/year from prop firms. The cost (typically £300-£600 for a basic self-assessment) pays for itself through proper expense claims and peace of mind.
Don't ignore it. HMRC can access bank records and international payment data. The idea that overseas prop firm payouts are invisible to HMRC is a dangerous myth. All UK residents are taxed on worldwide income.
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