Running a UK company from Pakistan? Here’s something that doesn’t get spelled out clearly enough: your Corporation Tax Return and your personal Self Assessment aren’t the same filing under two different names. They’re separate. They have separate deadlines. And HMRC won’t care that you got one right if the other one shows up late.
This page is written for Pakistan-based and non-resident Pakistani directors running a UK Limited Company from a distance. If you’ve ever assumed that submitting the company’s tax return also takes care of your own personal tax situation, keep reading. That assumption is exactly what trips people up.
Trusted by UK companies with founders based across Pakistan. Filings handled by HMRC-recognized agents who specialize in non-resident Pakistani (NRP) company compliance.
Most of the confusion around UK tax compliance for overseas directors comes from one wrong assumption: that a Limited Company has a single tax return, and once that’s filed, everything’s covered.
It isn’t. Here’s where founders usually get caught out.
It doesn’t, not even close. CT600 reports what the company earned. It says nothing about what you personally took out of it.
If you’ve taken any dividends, or picked up other untaxed income, there’s a decent chance you need to file personally as well.
The company’s deadline and your personal deadline run on different clocks. Neither one waits for the other.
That’s a fair worry. Corporation Tax penalties and Self Assessment penalties are charged independently. Sorting out one doesn’t touch a penalty already building on the other.
None of this is some rare edge case. It’s just how the UK system works, and it tends to catch out founders who set up a company for credibility or client access without anyone walking them through what happens after incorporation.
See how the two obligations differPart of why this gap exists: most UK accountants are built around serving UK residents. They handle the company return, mention Self Assessment somewhere along the way, and assume the director already knows where they stand personally. For someone managing a company from Karachi, Lahore, or Islamabad, that assumption leaves a real gap.
A coordinated service treats these as one engagement instead of two filings that barely talk to each other. Whether it’s a UK Limited Company run from Pakistan or a director splitting time between both countries, the CT600 and your personal Self Assessment get reviewed side by side. That includes the currency, remittance, and non-residency questions that tend to come up specifically when a founder isn’t physically in the UK.
See What’s IncludedOne provider.
Two filings.
Nothing left unaccounted for.
Once both filings are actually handled properly, day-to-day life changes in ways you’d notice.
The company’s 12-month deadline and your personal 31 January deadline get tracked together instead of separately.
When both filings sit inside the same review process, the odds of one quietly slipping through while you’re focused on the other drop considerably.
You’ll actually know whether dividends, untaxed income, or some other event means you need to file Self Assessment, instead of guessing and hoping for the best.
No juggling two accountants, no explaining your situation twice.
Everything’s built around your time zone, not the other way round.
This process is built for founders who aren’t in the UK and have no interest in chasing paperwork across time zones.
It works out whether you need CT600 only, Self Assessment only, or both, based on how the company’s structured and what you’ve actually drawn from it.
It’s asynchronous, so nothing depends on matching UK office hours.
Cross-checked against each other so the numbers line up.
Timed to each deadline separately rather than bundled into one date.
So you’re not back here answering the same questions a year from now.
Here’s what a coordinated CT600 and Self Assessment engagement typically covers.
Both sides include cross-border document support – remote identity verification and digital signatures, so nothing requires flying to the UK.
Pricing depends on whether you need one filing or both, and it’s worth confirming rather than assuming.
For companies that need their Corporation Tax Return filed but where the director has no personal filing trigger this year.
Covers both CT600 and Self Assessment as one coordinated engagement. Usually the better choice when a director takes dividends, since it removes the risk of one filing being reviewed with no reference to the other.
For directors whose CT600 is already handled elsewhere but who still need their personal return filed.
[Exact fees available on request – fixed-fee pricing, no hourly billing]
Fixed fees, quoted in either PKR or GBP. No hidden charges, and no hourly billing surprises after the work’s already done.
A UK Limited Company files a CT600 to report its profits and pay Corporation Tax. The director, separately, may need to file a Self Assessment return to report personal income like dividends. Two different obligations, two different parties, two different deadlines. Filing one doesn’t stand in for the other.
Here’s how they stack up side by side.
Worth repeating: the CT600 belongs to the company as a legal entity, even though the director is the one running that process. That’s a separate matter from the director’s own personal filing duty, which sits with them alone.
These aren’t alternatives to choose between. Plenty of directors need to file both, in the same year, for the same company.
Living in Pakistan doesn’t exempt a director from UK personal filing obligations once the usual triggers apply. It comes down to UK dividend tax for non-residents: Self Assessment tracks what you personally received, not where you happened to be sitting when you received it. For most NRP directors, the UK tax return in question gets triggered by dividends, not by where they live.
The most common trigger for Pakistan-based directors is dividends, plain and simple. If you’ve drawn dividends from your UK company, that’s personal income, and it needs reporting through Self Assessment no matter your residency status. Same goes for other untaxed income received from the company.
Take a founder based in Karachi running a UK consultancy. Once the company’s accounting period ends, the CT600 is due within 12 months of that date. Separately, if the founder drew dividends during that period, a Self Assessment return is due by 31 January following the relevant tax year. Two filings, two clocks, one underlying business.
If you answer yes to any of those, a Self Assessment filing is probably required.
This is the part generic UK accountants tend to skip, mostly because their client base is UK residents, where the question rarely comes up in quite the same way. For an overseas founder, it’s the difference between staying compliant and eating an avoidable penalty.
Late filing costs money on both sides, and the two penalty regimes run completely independently of each other.
A late CT600 filing means penalties charged straight to the company, scaled to how far past the deadline it’s filed.
A late Self Assessment filing means penalties charged straight to the director as an individual, with more piling on the longer the return sits outstanding.
Worth remembering: fixing one filing doesn’t cancel out a penalty already building on the other. If both were due and only one got filed, HMRC treats the missed one as its own separate failure, full stop.
[Current penalty amounts and thresholds available on request, as these are set by HMRC and confirmed at the time of your assessment call]
A UK consultancy owner based in Lahore had been filing CT600 returns on time for years but never touched Self Assessment, assuming the company filing had it covered. A review turned up dividends taken over multiple years that had quietly triggered a personal filing requirement nobody had flagged. The outstanding Self Assessment returns got filed, the director’s filing calendar was straightened out, and future deadlines are now tracked alongside the CT600 cycle.
A SaaS founder running a UK entity from Islamabad had a CT600 filed by a previous accountant with zero visibility into the director’s personal position. Bringing both filings under one coordinated review closed that gap before it turned into a missed deadline.
“Xpezia guided us through UK company compliance and filing deadlines with clear communication. Their team made the entire process straightforward.”
“The compliance reminders and ongoing support helped us stay on top of our UK obligations without worrying about missed deadlines.”
“Everything was handled remotely and professionally. The process was smooth from onboarding to compliance.”
Across all of these, the same dual-filing question keeps coming up: does the director’s personal position actually match what the company’s already filed.
Everything happens online, start to finish. No office visits, no need to set foot in the UK at any stage.
Document collection runs through a secure client portal. Identity verification and signatures are handled digitally, and filings are prepared using HMRC-recognized filing software. The whole thing is built to work across time zones, not around UK office hours.
Document collection runs through a secure client portal.
Identity verification and signatures are handled digitally.
Filings are prepared using HMRC-recognized filing software, built to work across time zones, not around UK office hours.
Not quite. CT600 is the form used to report and pay Corporation Tax. The tax itself is Corporation Tax; CT600 is how the company reports its profits and works out what it owes.
Yes, and in most cases it has to. CT600 filings go in online along with the company’s accounts.
Not always. It comes down to whether specific triggers apply, like receiving dividends or other untaxed income from the company. If there’s no such income in a given year, a director might not need to file at all.
Whichever one you missed gets treated as its own compliance failure. Filing the CT600 on time won’t shield you from a penalty on a late Self Assessment, and it works the other way too.
Usually dividends from the company. Other untaxed income, or a direct requirement from HMRC to file, can trigger it as well.
CT600 is due within 12 months of the end of the company’s accounting period. Self Assessment, filed online, is due 31 January following the relevant tax year. They almost never land on the same date.
“This sounds expensive.”
Pricing is fixed, fee-based, and confirmed upfront before any work starts. No hourly billing creeping up on you afterward.
“How do I know this is legitimate, given I’m not in the UK?”
Filings are handled by HMRC-recognized agents, and the whole process, verification and signatures included, is built to run remotely from day one.
“This seems complicated to coordinate from Pakistan.”
That’s exactly what the process is designed for. Document collection is asynchronous, and nothing requires matching UK time zones.
“I’m worried about missing a deadline I don’t even know exists.”
That’s precisely the gap this service closes. Both calendars get tracked together, not left for you to juggle on your own.
“What if I’m still not sure this applies to me?”
That’s what the free obligation assessment call is for. It tells you exactly what you need before anything’s charged.
“This sounds expensive.”
Pricing is fixed, fee-based, and confirmed upfront before any work starts. No hourly billing creeping up on you afterward.
“How do I know this is legitimate, given I’m not in the UK?”
Filings are handled by HMRC-recognized agents, and the whole process, verification and signatures included, is built to run remotely from day one.
“This seems complicated to coordinate from Pakistan.”
That’s exactly what the process is designed for. Document collection is asynchronous, and nothing requires matching UK time zones.
“I’m worried about missing a deadline I don’t even know exists.”
That’s precisely the gap this service closes. Both calendars get tracked together, not left for you to juggle on your own.
“What if I’m still not sure this applies to me?”
That’s what the free obligation assessment call is for. It tells you exactly what you need before anything’s charged.
Every engagement starts with a free, no-obligation consultation. Nothing gets charged until you know exactly what you need and what it costs.
[Specific deadline guarantee terms, if applicable, confirmed during your consultation call]
If you’re running a UK Limited Company from Pakistan, your CT600 and your Self Assessment are two separate obligations, not one. One reports what the company earned. The other reports what you personally took out of it. Filing one doesn’t excuse the other, and HMRC penalizes each on its own terms.
Getting clarity on which applies to you takes one short call.
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