Business Ownership and Liability
Limited and Unlimited Liability
Liability refers to legal responsibility for a business's debts. The type of ownership structure determines whether that liability is limited or unlimited.
Unlimited liability means there is no legal separation between the owner and the business. If the business cannot pay its debts, creditors can pursue the owner's personal assets — their home, car, savings, and any other possessions. The owner and the business are, in law, the same entity.
Limited liability means the owner's personal finances are legally separate from the business. If the business fails and owes money, the most an investor or shareholder can lose is the amount they invested. Their personal assets are protected.
Key term — limited liability: the owner's financial responsibility for business debts is capped at the amount they invested. Personal assets cannot be seized to pay business debts.
Key term — unlimited liability: the owner is personally responsible for all business debts. There is no legal separation between the owner's finances and the business's finances.
Worked example: Priya runs a café as a sole trader. The business struggles and builds up £40,000 in unpaid supplier bills. Because Priya has unlimited liability, creditors can take her to court and force her to sell her car and use her personal savings to clear the debt — even if this means she is left with nothing. If Priya had instead traded as a private limited company, she would only lose the £10,000 she invested as share capital; her home and personal savings would be protected.
The distinction matters enormously when choosing a business structure. Unlimited liability is a genuine personal financial risk, not an abstract legal concept.
Sole Traders and Partnerships
Sole traders are individuals who own and run a business themselves. The sole trader is the business — there is no legal distinction.
- Liability: unlimited. All personal assets are at risk if the business fails.
- Control: complete. The owner makes every decision without consulting others.
- Set-up: minimal paperwork; just register with HMRC for Self Assessment tax.
- Capital: limited to what the owner can contribute or borrow personally.
- Profit: the owner keeps all profit after tax.
Typical sole traders: freelance graphic designers, plumbers, market stallholders, hairdressers operating from home.
Partnerships are formed when two or more people go into business together, sharing responsibility, costs, and profits. The Partnership Act 1890 governs them by default; partners may also draw up a deed of partnership to clarify profit shares, roles, and exit terms.
- Liability: unlimited for all partners. Each partner can be held liable for the full debt of the business, including debts caused by a co-partner's decisions.
- Control: shared — decisions may need agreement; this can cause conflict.
- Capital: partners pool their resources, so more capital is available than a sole trader can raise alone.
- Profit: shared between partners according to their agreement.
Typical partnerships: solicitors' firms, GP practices, accountancy firms, small building contractors.
Exam tip: A common mistake is to say partnerships have limited liability — they do not. Only limited liability partnerships (LLPs, used in professional firms) and limited companies offer limited liability. Standard partnerships face unlimited liability.
Private Limited Companies (Ltd)
A private limited company (Ltd) is a separate legal entity from its owners. The business can own assets, enter contracts, and be sued in its own name. Ownership is divided into shares, held by shareholders.
- Liability: limited. Shareholders can only lose the value of their shares.
- Control: held by directors, who may or may not be shareholders. Major decisions go to a shareholder vote.
- Capital: raised by selling shares privately (cannot advertise shares to the public).
- Admin: must register with Companies House; file annual accounts and a confirmation statement; accounts are publicly available.
- Profit: distributed as dividends to shareholders, proportional to their share holdings.
Worked example: Marcus wants to open a coffee shop. As a sole trader he would face unlimited liability — if the business fails with £80,000 of debt, his personal savings and property are at risk. If he forms a Ltd company and invests £15,000 as share capital, his maximum loss is £15,000, regardless of how much the company owes. The creditors cannot pursue his personal assets.
The trade-off is cost and administration: registering a company, filing annual accounts with Companies House, and potentially hiring an accountant adds time and expense that a sole trader avoids.
Note: Public limited companies (PLCs) — where shares are sold to the public on a stock exchange — are covered in Theme 2 (2.1.1). They are not a start-up option and are not relevant here.
Comparing Ownership Structures
| Ownership type | Liability | Control | Capital raising | Best suited to |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sole trader | Unlimited | Full — owner decides alone | Limited to owner's own funds and personal borrowing | One-person businesses, low-risk trades, freelancers |
| Partnership | Unlimited | Shared — partners must agree | Pooled from multiple partners | Small professional firms, businesses with complementary skills |
| Private limited company (Ltd) | Limited | Directors run day-to-day; shareholders vote on major issues | Sell shares privately to investors | Businesses seeking investment, those wanting asset protection |
Choosing between structures: the right choice depends on three questions:
- How much risk is involved? A business with large debts or expensive assets carries more risk — limited liability becomes more attractive.
- Do you need outside investment? A Ltd company can take on shareholders; a sole trader cannot.
- How much admin can you cope with? Sole traders have the simplest tax and record-keeping obligations.
Worked example — coffee shop scenario revisited: Danielle wants to open a coffee shop in a high street unit. Setup costs are £60,000. She has £20,000 saved and needs investors. A sole trader cannot easily bring in investors. A partnership could, but all parties would face unlimited liability. A Ltd company lets her sell shares to two investors, cap everyone's liability at their investment, and keep a professional structure for future growth. Most aspiring café owners at this scale choose Ltd.
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Franchising — Getting Started with an Established Brand
A franchise is an arrangement where a business owner (the franchisee) pays for the right to use another company's (the franchisor's) brand name, business model, and support systems.
How it works:
- The franchisee pays an initial fee to buy into the franchise.
- The franchisee pays ongoing royalties (a percentage of revenue) to the franchisor.
- In return, the franchisee receives the right to trade under the established brand, training, marketing materials, and operational support.
Well-known franchise operations include McDonald's, Subway, Domino's, and Snap Fitness.
Advantages of franchising (for the franchisee):
- Established brand: customers already recognise and trust the name, reducing the need to build brand awareness from scratch.
- Proven business model: the franchisor has already worked out the systems, supply chains, and processes. The risk of failure is lower than a completely new venture.
- Training and support: franchisors provide initial training and ongoing operational help — valuable for first-time business owners.
- Easier to obtain finance: banks view franchises as lower risk than new independent businesses, so loans are easier to secure.
Disadvantages of franchising (for the franchisee):
- High initial cost: franchise fees can be substantial — a McDonald's franchise can require upwards of £1 million in initial investment.
- Less independence: the franchisee must follow the franchisor's rules on products, pricing, marketing, and suppliers. Creative freedom is severely limited.
- Share of profit: royalty payments reduce the profit the franchisee keeps.
- Dependent on franchisor reputation: if the franchisor brand is damaged by a scandal or product recall, the franchisee suffers even if they did nothing wrong.
Exam tip: franchise questions often ask you to evaluate whether franchising is a good option for a specific person. High cost and low independence are the key disadvantages; established brand and lower failure risk are the key advantages. Always link your answer to the person's situation in the question.
Worked Example: Choosing a Structure
Scenario: Amir and his sister Nadia want to start a mobile catering business selling street food at festivals. They have £8,000 between them, expect modest profits in year one, and want to keep things simple. A friend has suggested they form a Ltd company; their accountant has said a partnership would be simpler.
Evaluating the options:
Partnership: quick to set up, low admin, splits costs and work. Downside: unlimited liability. If the van breaks down, the business fails, and they owe suppliers £5,000, both Amir and Nadia are personally liable. However, £8,000 start-up investment means the absolute loss is manageable.
Ltd company: protects personal assets, looks more professional to clients. Downside: costs to incorporate, annual Companies House filings, more complex accounting — likely to need a paid accountant.
Conclusion for this scenario: given the modest scale and low debt risk, most examiners would accept that a partnership is reasonable here. But if they planned to invest heavily or take on a business loan, the Ltd structure would make more sense.
On a 6-mark justify question, state which option you recommend, give at least two reasons supporting it, acknowledge the alternative, and reach a conclusion tied to the specific context.
Exam Technique: Ownership and Liability
1. Unlimited liability means personal assets — say so
"The owner would be liable for debts" scores 1 mark. "The owner would be personally liable, meaning creditors could take their home or savings" scores the application mark. Always state what personal assets could be seized.
2. Do not say partnerships have limited liability
Standard partnerships have unlimited liability. Every partner can be pursued for the full debt. Only a limited liability partnership (LLP) — not on the Edexcel GCSE spec — changes this.
3. Ltd companies protect owners, but cannot sell shares publicly
A Ltd company raises capital by selling shares privately (to family, friends, or angel investors). It cannot advertise shares to the general public — that requires a PLC, which is Theme 2 content.
4. Franchise questions require balance
Franchises are not simply "a good idea." On a justify question you must weigh initial cost and loss of independence against brand recognition and lower failure risk — then conclude based on the specific business in the question.
5. Match the structure to the context given
A sole trader is appropriate for a low-risk, low-capital, one-person business. A partnership suits two or more people combining skills. A Ltd company suits those wanting investment or asset protection. Saying "it depends on the owner's circumstances" without specifying how earns no marks.
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