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How to Convert a Limited Company to a CIC in the UK: Complete Guide

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Many organisations begin life as a standard limited company and only later realise their work delivers clear social or community benefit. This often happens when applying for grants, working with councils, or formalising a social mission.

If that applies to you, you may be asking whether you can convert your existing company into a Community Interest Company (CIC) rather than starting again.

You can — but converting a limited company into a CIC is not a cosmetic change. It is a permanent legal and regulatory shift, reviewed by the CIC Regulator, and mistakes can lead to rejection or long delays.

This guide explains, in plain English, how to convert a limited company to a CIC in the UK, what documents are required, where applications commonly fail, and how to decide whether conversion is right before submitting anything.


Quick Answer: Converting a Limited Company to a CIC

Approval is not automatic. The Regulator assesses substance as well as wording.


Contents


What Does It Mean to Convert a Limited Company to a CIC?

When you convert to a CIC, your company continues to exist, but its purpose, restrictions, and regulatory oversight change.

In most cases:

The most significant change is the CIC asset lock. This permanently restricts how assets and profits can be used, ensuring they are applied for community benefit. Once introduced, the asset lock cannot simply be removed later.

A CIC must operate primarily for community benefit, not private profit.


Is Your Limited Company Eligible to Become a CIC?

Not every limited company is suitable for conversion.

When conversion is usually appropriate

When conversion is often rejected

The Regulator looks beyond buzzwords and assesses what the company actually does in practice.


Before You Start: Essential Checks

Before beginning CIC registration UK conversion, review the following carefully:

Important point often missed:
The asset lock applies to existing assets, not just future income. This can affect retained profits, equipment, and intellectual property.


Step-by-Step: How to Convert a Limited Company to a CIC

Step 1: Pass Special Resolutions

At a general meeting, shareholders must pass special resolutions to:

These resolutions form part of the conversion application.


Step 2: Update the Articles of Association

Your new Articles must include specific CIC provisions, including:

The CIC Regulator provides model constitutions, which are often used as a starting point.


Step 3: Complete Form CIC37 (Conversion Application)

Form CIC37 is used specifically to convert an existing company into a CIC.

It includes the Community Interest Statement, which explains:

This is the most common failure point. Inconsistencies between the CIC37 and your Articles frequently cause delays or rejection.


Step 4: Submit Supporting Forms and Documents

Alongside CIC37, you must submit:

These are submitted to Companies House and the CIC Regulator, with the relevant fees.


Step 5: Pay the Fees

Typical costs include:

Fees are modest, but errors can lead to repeat submissions.


Step 6: Respond to Any Regulator Queries

If clarification is requested:


What Commonly Goes Wrong (and Why)

CIC conversion applications are delayed or rejected because:

Once rejected, resubmission often requires full rewrites.


Converting vs Setting Up a New CIC

Conversion may be appropriate if:

Setting up a new CIC may be better if:


Frequently Asked Questions about CICs

Can a CIC make a profit?

Yes. A CIC can trade and make profits, but profits must be used primarily for community benefit.

How much tax does a CIC pay?

A CIC pays corporation tax like any other company. CIC status does not provide automatic tax relief.

Is it better to be a CIC or a charity?

Neither is inherently better. CICs offer more trading flexibility; charities offer tax relief but stricter regulation.

Can I pay myself from a CIC?

Yes. Directors can be paid reasonable salaries. Dividends are restricted in CICs limited by shares.

How many directors are needed for a CIC?

At least one director is required, though funders often expect more for good governance.


Take the Next Step

If you’re ready to unlock the full social impact potential of your business by converting to a CIC, it’s important to get the structure, wording, and regulatory positioning right from the outset.

Converting an existing limited company into a Community Interest Company involves permanent legal and regulatory changes — particularly around the asset lock, profit distribution, and how your organisation is assessed by funders and public bodies. Getting these decisions wrong can lead to rejection, delays, or long-term restrictions that are difficult to reverse.

Contact us today on 0207 078 7477 to schedule a consultation and take the first step toward a more socially responsible and community-focused future, or complete our enquiry form to book a FREE initial CIC consultation.


How we can help

Setting up a Community Interest Company (CIC) is not just about registering a company — the wording of your Community Interest Statement, the structure you choose, and how your social purpose is presented all have long-term regulatory and funding implications.

At KG Accountants, we draft your Community Interest Statement to meet CIC Regulator requirements while reflecting the language and priorities commonly expected by grant funders and local authorities. This gives your organisation a funder-ready foundation from the outset and reduces the risk of delays, clarification requests, or repeated rewrites when applying for grants or public funding.

Our fixed and transparent CIC fees remove uncertainty, allowing you to move forward with confidence and focus on running your organisation, not worrying about compliance or hidden costs.

Arrange a FREE CIC initial consultation
Call us on 0207 078 7477 or complete our enquiry form to book a FREE CIC consultation and discuss your plans with a specialist:
kgaccountants.co.uk/contact-us


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