Accountants for Education & Training Businesses —
From Private Tutors to Training Academies
Specialist accountancy for UK education and training organisations — private schools, independent tutors, corporate training providers, e-learning businesses, apprenticeship levy management and Ofsted-regulated providers. VAT exemption for qualifying education, restricted funds accounting and charitable status. ACCA qualified. Fixed fee.
Education & Training Accounting — Changing Regulations, Complex Funding
The UK education and training sector has been significantly disrupted by the government’s January 2025 decision to apply 20% VAT to private school fees — the biggest structural change to independent education taxation in decades. Combined with the apprenticeship levy, complex VAT treatment for different types of education supply, restricted fund accounting for grant-funded organisations and the ongoing challenge of Ofsted compliance, education businesses require specialist financial expertise.
Private school VAT from January 2025 has fundamentally changed the tax position of independent schools in England. From 1 January 2025, independent schools became subject to 20% VAT on tuition fees — previously exempt. This created both a direct cost impact (schools must now charge VAT or absorb it) and a VAT registration/compliance obligation for schools previously outside the VAT system. We advise on the full implications, partial exemption calculations, VAT on boarding fees (different treatment from tuition) and the capital goods scheme for school buildings.
Education VAT exemption remains available for the supply of education by eligible bodies — state schools, further and higher education institutions, and certain qualifying bodies. For private training providers, the VAT treatment depends on whether the supply constitutes ‘education’ (potentially exempt), ‘vocational training’ (potentially exempt when provided by eligible bodies), or ‘commercial training’ (standard-rated). The boundary is complex and regularly misapplied — HMRC actively scrutinises the sector.
Apprenticeship levy funds — paid by employers with a payroll above £3 million at a rate of 0.5% of the annual pay bill — must be claimed through the Digital Apprenticeship Service before they expire (18 months from payment). We manage levy accounts for qualifying employers, ensuring all available funds are claimed against qualifying apprenticeship programmes.
✅ Services We Provide
- ✓ Private school VAT registration and returns
- ✓ Education VAT exemption assessment
- ✓ Apprenticeship levy management
- ✓ Restricted fund accounting
- ✓ Grant income accounting (education-specific)
- ✓ Charitable education trust accounts
- ✓ Academy trust financial returns
- ✓ CPD and training provider accounts
- ✓ E-learning business VAT and accounts
- ✓ Ofsted financial governance support
- ✓ Gift Aid on school donations
- ✓ Payroll — teaching and support staff
Our Approach — Sector-Focused, Results-Driven
Which Businesses We Serve — And How
Independent Schools and Academies
Independent schools (post-January 2025 VAT), academy trusts and faith schools — complex VAT, governance reporting, restricted funds and charity SORP compliance.
Private Tutors and Tutoring Agencies
Individual tutors and tutoring agencies — Self Assessment or limited company accounts, IR35 assessment for tutor engagement models and VAT on tutoring services.
Corporate Training Providers
In-person and online corporate training businesses — VAT treatment of training services, e-learning platforms, learndirect-style operations and apprenticeship delivery.
E-Learning and EdTech Businesses
Digital education businesses — VAT on electronic services, UK/international learner VAT treatment, subscription revenue accounting and R&D relief for platform development.
4 Costly Mistakes in This Sector
Independent schools that became VAT-liable from January 2025 and have not yet registered or are filing incorrect VAT returns are accumulating liability. The deadline has passed — immediate registration and potential correction of historic returns is required.
Many training businesses incorrectly treat all of their income as VAT-exempt because the activity involves ‘education’. Commercial training by non-eligible bodies is standard-rated. Vocational training by eligible bodies may be exempt. The specific facts of each supply determine the VAT treatment.
Levy funds paid into the Digital Apprenticeship Service expire after 18 months. Many employers pay levy but fail to claim it against qualifying programmes — losing funds they are entitled to. Active levy management prevents expiry.
Grant-funded education organisations must account separately for restricted and unrestricted funds. Restricted grant income must only be spent on the purposes specified by the funder. Incorrect treatment risks funding clawback and reputational damage with future funders.
Education & Training — Your Questions Answered
From 1 January 2025, independent schools in England, Wales and Scotland became subject to 20% VAT on tuition fees. Schools with an annual turnover above the VAT registration threshold (£90,000) must be registered for VAT and charge VAT on tuition fees. Schools may partially offset this with input VAT recovery on their costs. Boarding fees have a different VAT treatment (subject to the 20% VAT but with some exemptions for residential accommodation elements).
It depends. Tuition by an eligible body (certain schools, colleges) is VAT-exempt. Private tutoring by an individual is generally exempt if the tutor is providing instruction in subjects ordinarily taught in schools. However, private tutoring by a limited company (rather than an individual) may be standard-rated. Tutoring agencies that supply tutors to clients rather than providing the tuition themselves are also likely standard-rated. We assess the specific VAT treatment for each tutoring business model.
The apprenticeship levy is paid by UK employers with an annual pay bill above £3 million. The levy rate is 0.5% of the entire pay bill (not just the amount above £3 million), giving each employer a £15,000 annual allowance to offset (so effective levy = 0.5% of payroll minus £15,000). For education providers, the levy funds apprenticeship programmes for their own staff — and can also be transferred (up to 25%) to fund apprenticeships in smaller supply chain organisations.
Charitable education organisations follow the Charities SORP (Statement of Recommended Practice) based on FRS 102. This requires income to be recognised in line with Charities SORP principles (which may differ from commercial revenue recognition), restricted funds to be presented separately from unrestricted funds, and a full narrative explanation of income sources and fund movements. Academy trusts have their own Academies Accounts Direction from the ESFA.
Digital education services (e-learning courses, online tutoring, recorded lectures) are generally subject to VAT in the UK. If provided to UK consumers, UK VAT at 20% applies. If provided to UK VAT-registered businesses, the reverse charge applies. For overseas consumers, UK VAT depends on the customer’s location and registration status. There are no blanket exemptions for online education — the VAT treatment must be assessed for each supply.
Fixed Fees — Agreed Upfront, No Surprises
Every fee fixed and agreed before we start. Book a free consultation for your exact quote.
Complete Your Accounting Package
Education & Training Accounting — VAT, Funding & Compliance Handled
Book a free consultation. We’ll assess your VAT position (including the January 2025 private school changes), review your funding compliance and ensure your accounts are fully compliant.