Help Centre · Statutory Accounts · 4 min read

Choosing your accounts framework: FRS 105 vs FRS 102 Section 1A

How FRS 105 (micro-entity) and FRS 102 Section 1A (small company) accounts differ, and the size thresholds - including the higher limits from 6 April 2025 - that decide which one your company uses.

Tax Optimiser prepares your statutory accounts under one of two reporting frameworks, chosen to match the size of the company: FRS 105 for micro-entities and FRS 102 Section 1A for small companies. Which one a period uses is shown as the Statutory Accounts Type above the preview on the View Accounts screen, and you set a company’s default on its Companies House settings tab under Default Stat Account Type. This article explains how the two frameworks differ and the size thresholds — including the higher limits that apply to financial years beginning on or after 6 April 2025 — that decide which one your company qualifies for.

The two frameworks at a glance

Both produce a statement of financial position (balance sheet) and a profit and loss account in the Companies Act formats. The difference is how much you must disclose and how items are measured.

FRS 105 (micro-entity)FRS 102 Section 1A (small company)
Who it is forThe smallest companies, that qualify as micro-entitiesCompanies that qualify as small but are above, or opt out of, the micro-entity regime
DisclosureThe legal minimum — a handful of notesMuch fuller — around thirty possible notes plus accounting policies
Accounting policies noteNot requiredRequired
MeasurementHistorical cost only — no revaluations or fair valueFull FRS 102 — revaluation of fixed assets and fair value (e.g. investment property) are available
Deferred taxNot recognisedRecognised
Primary statementsProfit and loss account and balance sheet onlyAdds a statement of changes in equity; a cash flow statement is optional
True and fair viewPresumed if the statutory formats are followedAchieved through the notes and any extra disclosures needed
Directors’ reportNot requiredPrepared, though small companies are exempt from filing it publicly

In short, FRS 105 keeps everything as simple as the law allows — fewer notes, no policies, no fair value and no deferred tax — while FRS 102 Section 1A gives a more complete picture. You can see how the note sets differ in Notes for micro-entity (FRS 105) accounts and Notes and policies for small-company (FRS 102 1A) accounts.

Which size is your company?

A company qualifies for a size band if it meets at least two of the three conditions in the tables below, normally for two consecutive years before the classification changes (special rules apply in a company’s first year). “Balance sheet total” means total assets before deducting liabilities.

The updated thresholds

The size limits were raised by the Companies (Accounts and Reports) (Amendment and Transitional Provision) Regulations 2024 and apply to financial years beginning on or after 6 April 2025. The employee limits are unchanged; the turnover and balance-sheet totals rose by roughly a half.

Micro-entity

Criterion (meet any two)Periods beginning before 6 Apr 2025Periods beginning on or after 6 Apr 2025
TurnoverNot more than £632,000Not more than £1,000,000
Balance sheet totalNot more than £316,000Not more than £500,000
Average employeesNot more than 10Not more than 10

Small company

Criterion (meet any two)Periods beginning before 6 Apr 2025Periods beginning on or after 6 Apr 2025
TurnoverNot more than £10.2 millionNot more than £15 million
Balance sheet totalNot more than £5.1 millionNot more than £7.5 million
Average employeesNot more than 50Not more than 50

Because the limits went up, some companies that were previously medium-sized now qualify as small, and some small companies now qualify as micro-entities — which can reduce what they have to prepare and disclose.

A few companies cannot use these regimes

Size is not the only test. The micro-entity and small-company regimes are not available to some companies whatever their size — for example public companies (plcs), certain financial, insurance and regulated entities, and members of an ineligible group. Charitable companies cannot use FRS 105. If you are unsure whether your company qualifies, check with your accountant before choosing a framework.

Setting it in Tax Optimiser

Each accounting period carries its own Statutory Accounts Type, shown above the live preview on the View Accounts screen. To set the default a company starts from, open Organisations > Edit > Companies House and choose Default Stat Account Type. Changing the type rebuilds the accounts — the balance-sheet detail and the available notes change to match the framework. For a full tour of the screen, start with Touring the View Accounts screen.

The short version

Choosing your accounts framework: FRS 105 vs FRS 102 Section 1A — in brief

FRS 105 is the simplest framework, for micro-entities; FRS 102 Section 1A is fuller, for small companies.

The size thresholds rose for financial years beginning on or after 6 April 2025 - micro turnover to one million, small turnover to fifteen million.

Each period has a Statutory Accounts Type; set the company default on the Companies House settings tab.