Last checked: 3 July 2026
Judgment date: 1 July 2026
Case: Commissioners for His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs v BlueCrest Capital Management (UK) LLP [2026] UKSC 18
Quick Answer: What Happened in the HMRC BlueCrest LLP Tax Case?
The Supreme Court unanimously dismissed BlueCrest Capital Management (UK) LLP’s appeal against HMRC in a major dispute over the tax status of certain LLP members.
The case concerned the “salaried members” rules, which can treat an LLP member as an employee for income tax and National Insurance purposes.
The court ruled that most of the remuneration was disguised salary and clarified that “significant influence” must be based on enforceable legal rights and duties.
Key takeaways:
- BlueCrest lost its Supreme Court appeal.
- The case covers the 2014/15 to 2018/19 tax years.
- HMRC’s assessments totalled about £197.3 million in PAYE and National Insurance.
- The judgment clarifies how the salaried members rules apply.
- The case will return to the First-tier Tribunal to apply the Supreme Court’s interpretation.
Why Did HMRC Challenge BlueCrest’s Treatment of Its LLP Members?

BlueCrest ran its UK investment business through an LLP structure, with members ranging from portfolio managers to senior leaders holding varied roles and governance rights.
HMRC challenged the tax treatment of many of these individuals, arguing they effectively functioned as employees rather than true partners under the salaried members rules.
- HMRC said most members met all three statutory conditions for employee-like tax treatment
- It argued their pay resembled salary, their influence was limited, and capital contributions were insufficient
- The case focused on legal and economic reality, not job titles
- Four executive-committee members were accepted as having significant influence
- Dispute centred on others, especially portfolio managers with strong commercial impact
The key issue: commercial importance does not automatically equal partnership influence for tax purposes.
How Do the LLP Salaried Members Rules Apply to BlueCrest?
Under the UK salaried members legislation, an individual LLP member is treated as an employee for income tax and National Insurance only when Conditions A, B and C are all satisfied.
This three-part framework is confirmed in HMRC’s official overview of the salaried members rules.
Condition a – Disguised Salary
Condition A considers whether at least 80% of the member’s expected remuneration is fixed, varies without reference to the LLP’s overall profits or losses, or is effectively unaffected by those overall results.
BlueCrest argued that its portfolio managers’ remuneration was linked to profits.
However, the court distinguished rewards tied to an individual manager or desk from a genuine share of the profits or losses of the LLP as a whole.
A performance award does not cease to resemble salary merely because it depends on strong individual results.
HMRC’s guidance similarly focuses on whether remuneration is genuinely affected by overall LLP profitability.
Condition B – Significant Influence
Condition B is satisfied when a member does not have significant influence over the LLP’s affairs.
The Supreme Court held that qualifying influence must arise from the enforceable legal rights and duties governing the member’s relationship with the LLP.
Those rights may arise from the LLP agreement, legislation or another binding arrangement.
Personal standing, commercial success or informal access to decision-makers is not enough by itself. A member may be highly valuable without possessing legally recognised influence over the partnership’s affairs.
Condition C – Capital Contribution
Condition C broadly applies where the member’s capital contribution is less than 25% of their expected disguised salary.
Condition C was not disputed before the Supreme Court in BlueCrest. Nevertheless, it remains important for other LLPs because failing any one of the three conditions prevents salaried-member treatment.
The rules must therefore be assessed together, rather than treating significant influence as the only relevant question.
Why Did the Supreme Court Dismiss BlueCrest’s Appeal?

The Supreme Court rejected BlueCrest’s interpretation of both disputed conditions.
On Condition A, it concluded that remuneration based mainly on personal or team performance was not sufficiently tied to BlueCrest’s overall profits and losses. Most of the relevant payments therefore amounted to disguised salary.
On Condition B, the court rejected the argument that commercial or operational influence alone was sufficient. It focused on the rights and duties belonging to a person in their capacity as an LLP member.
The Supreme Court’s official press summary confirms that the appeal was dismissed unanimously and that most remuneration met Condition A.
The judgment did not say that only board members can possess significant influence. Nor did it rule that operational influence can never count. Instead, the influence must:
- have an enforceable legal source;
- fall within the member’s recognised role;
- be significant in scope and substance; and
- relate meaningfully to the LLP’s affairs.
Portfolio managers could make investment decisions involving considerable sums, but the court found a material distinction between responsibility for investments and rights to influence BlueCrest’s governance.
That distinction explains why financial importance alone did not resolve the tax question.
How Much Tax Was at Stake, and Is the £200 Million Figure Final?
The amounts in dispute were substantial, but the widely reported £200 million figure should be described carefully.
Amounts reported in the proceedings:
| Element | Approximate amount | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| PAYE determinations | £142 million | Income tax HMRC said should have been accounted for through payroll |
| Class 1 National Insurance | £55.3 million | National Insurance liabilities associated with salaried-member treatment |
| Combined exposure | £197.3 million | Commonly rounded to about £200 million |
These figures concern tax and National Insurance determinations, not a criminal, civil or regulatory fine.
The Supreme Court decided the legal interpretation of Conditions A and B.
The matter is being remitted to the First-tier Tribunal so that the correct tests can be applied to the relevant members and periods.
The final financial outcome may therefore depend on the tribunal’s application of the judgment, procedural calculations and any applicable interest.
It is accurate to describe the case as a dispute worth close to £200 million, but not as a new £200 million penalty imposed by the Supreme Court.
What Does the BlueCrest Ruling Mean for Other UK LLPs?

The ruling is relevant beyond hedge funds because LLPs are widely used by asset managers, law firms, accountants, consultants, property businesses and other professional-services organisations.
Which LLP Structures Face Greater Risk?
Risk may be higher where members:
- receive most of their remuneration according to individual performance;
- have little exposure to the LLP’s overall profits and losses;
- make limited capital contributions;
- hold senior titles but lack enforceable voting or governance rights; or
- rely on informal influence rather than documented authority.
The judgment does not mean every LLP member is an employee. Each person must be assessed separately against all three conditions.
Why Does Employer National Insurance Matter?
Salaried-member treatment can require an LLP to operate PAYE and account for employer National Insurance. Across a large partnership and several tax years, that exposure can become commercially significant.
The judgment may also affect promotion structures, capital requirements, remuneration models and the number of individuals admitted as members.
However, firms should not respond by creating nominal rights that have no practical business purpose. Legal documentation should reflect genuine governance arrangements.
Does Commercial Importance Give an LLP Member Significant Influence?
Not necessarily. A member may control important investments, manage a large team or generate a substantial share of revenue without satisfying the significant-influence test.
The judgment separates several forms of influence:
- Legally grounded influence: Voting, consent, veto or decision-making rights derived from binding arrangements.
- Operational authority: Responsibility delegated to a member for a particular business function.
- Commercial influence: Power arising from revenue generation, expertise or client importance.
- Informal influence: The ability to persuade senior leaders without an enforceable right to participate in decisions.
The first category is central to Condition B. The others may help explain how an organisation operates, but cannot automatically replace enforceable member rights.
The court’s reasoning does not impose a universal board-membership test. A non-board member could possess significant influence through properly constituted rights over important parts of the LLP’s affairs.
Equally, attendance at meetings or consultation by management does not necessarily amount to significant influence.
Firms need evidence of what members were legally entitled to do, not merely evidence that their views were sometimes heard.
Could the HMRC BlueCrest LLP Tax Case Lead to Wider Investigations?

The judgment strengthens HMRC’s position where an LLP has relied on personal importance, informal influence or operational responsibility to support Condition B.
HMRC may examine:
- LLP agreements and side letters;
- voting and committee rights;
- remuneration calculations;
- capital contribution records;
- payroll treatment;
- meeting minutes; and
- evidence showing how formal rights operated.
That does not prove that every LLP will face an investigation. It does mean businesses with similar arrangements have a stronger reason to review their position before an enquiry begins.
HMRC said it “welcomed the court decision” and would consider whether its industry guidance needed updating, according to Reuters.
Businesses should avoid several misleading conclusions:
- The ruling has not abolished LLP tax treatment.
- It has not made every LLP member an employee.
- It has not established that only executive-committee members can have significant influence.
- It has not made individual profitability irrelevant in every context.
- It has not turned the tax determination into a £200 million fine.
The practical effect is narrower but still important: titles and commercial stature cannot substitute for the statutory conditions.
How Has BlueCrest Responded, and What Should UK LLPs Do Next?

BlueCrest criticised the outcome and HMRC’s published guidance. A company spokesperson said the UK was “no longer a serious contender as a jurisdiction in which to do business”.
That is BlueCrest’s position, not a finding made by the Supreme Court. The competitiveness debate should be kept separate from the court’s interpretation of the legislation.
Review Every Member Against All Three Conditions
LLPs should examine remuneration, governance rights and capital contributions member by member. Different categories of members may produce different results.
Compare Legal Documents With Actual Governance
The review should cover the LLP agreement, side letters, committee terms, delegated authorities and voting provisions.
The official Supreme Court case page and judgment record should be used as the primary reference for the court’s conclusions.
Documentation should match real commercial practice. Artificial rights that are never intended to operate may not provide reliable protection.
Assess Historic Exposure and Future Treatment
Firms should consider whether open tax periods, PAYE corrections, National Insurance, interest or financial provisions require attention.
They should also monitor HMRC’s guidance. The current manual states that all three conditions must be met and that the starting point is the particular member’s terms in the LLP agreement.
The BlueCrest decision does not invalidate the LLP model. It confirms that tax status depends on substance, enforceable rights and economic exposure—not simply the title “partner” or “member”.
Conclusion
The HMRC BlueCrest LLP tax case is a significant clarification of how the salaried members rules apply to UK partnerships.
The Supreme Court confirmed that commercial success, seniority and operational responsibility do not automatically amount to significant influence.
LLPs should now review remuneration, capital contributions and enforceable governance rights for each member.
The ruling does not end the LLP model, but it raises the standard of evidence required. Firms facing uncertainty should seek tax and legal advice before making changes.
Frequently Asked Questions
When was the BlueCrest Supreme Court judgment issued?
The judgment was handed down on 1 July 2026 and is reported as HMRC v BlueCrest Capital Management (UK) LLP [2026] UKSC 18.
Which tax years were covered by the dispute?
HMRC’s determinations covered five tax years, from 2014/15 to 2018/19.
Were all BlueCrest members challenged?
No. HMRC accepted that four original executive-committee members possessed sufficient influence. The dispute concerned other member groups.
Is salaried-member status the same as employment-law status?
No. The salaried members legislation determines treatment for specified income tax and National Insurance purposes. Employment-law status is a separate legal question.
Can a larger capital contribution prevent salaried-member treatment?
Potentially. If Condition C is not met because the member has contributed sufficient capital, the salaried members rules do not apply even where Conditions A and B are satisfied.
Can an LLP amend its agreement after the ruling?
Yes, but any amendment should create genuine and commercially meaningful rights. A paper change that does not reflect actual governance may not support the intended tax treatment.
Will HMRC change its guidance after BlueCrest?
HMRC said it would consider whether an update was required. Until any revision is published, LLPs should read the existing manual alongside the Supreme Court judgment and obtain professional advice where needed.
How We Checked This?
The article was checked against the Supreme Court judgment and press summary, HMRC’s Partnership Manual, the legislation’s policy guidance, and reporting supplied by the publisher.
The court documents were treated as the primary authority where commentary differed.
Editorial Note:
This article distinguishes the Supreme Court’s legal findings from reported tax estimates, company statements and wider industry commentary.
This is informational, not financial/legal advice.
The salaried members rules depend on each LLP member’s remuneration, capital contribution and legally enforceable rights. Businesses should obtain advice based on their circumstances.

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