Share Purchase Agreement: How SPAs Get Structured, Negotiated, and Signed

A share purchase agreement is the master contract that transfers legal ownership of a company by selling its issued share capital, rather than its individual assets. Under English law and most common-law jurisdictions modelled on it (Australia, Singapore, Hong Kong, Ireland, the BVI, the Cayman Islands), a share purchase agreement is the dominant private-M&A document, used in roughly 90% of UK control transactions according to the CMS European M&A Study 2024, which tracked 509 deals over the prior 12 months. This guide walks through the structure clause by clause, contrasts UK SPA mechanics against the US stock purchase agreement, and shows where most negotiations actually break down at signing.
If you sit on the deal team (sell-side advisor, buy-side principal, GC, tax counsel), the SPA is where every diligence finding, every valuation assumption, and every commercial concession finally gets reduced to enforceable text. Get the indemnity cap wrong, the locked-box leakage definition wrong, or the warranty disclosure standard wrong, and your client can lose seven figures after closing. This is the operator-level reference for getting it right.
Share Purchase Agreement at a Glance: Quick-Reference Table
Before drilling into individual clauses, here is the structural map of a typical UK-style SPA. Section ordering varies between firm precedents (Slaughter and May, Freshfields, Linklaters, Allen & Overy Shearman, Clifford Chance all use slightly different conventions), but the substantive content below appears in every market-standard agreement.
| Section | Typical Length | What it Does | Most-Negotiated Items |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Definitions and Interpretation | 10-25 pages | Defines every capitalised term used downstream | Material Adverse Change, Leakage, Permitted Leakage, Cash, Debt, Working Capital |
| 2. Sale and Purchase | 1-2 pages | Transfers legal and beneficial title to the shares | Whether sale is on a “sole legal and beneficial owner” basis |
| 3. Consideration | 3-8 pages | Fixes the price and payment mechanism | Locked-box vs completion accounts, earn-out triggers, deferred consideration |
| 4. Conditions Precedent | 2-5 pages | What must happen before completion | Antitrust, foreign-investment screening, key-customer consents |
| 5. Pre-Completion Covenants | 3-8 pages | How seller runs the business between signing and closing | Ordinary-course definition, permitted-actions list, consent thresholds |
| 6. Completion | 2-4 pages | Mechanics of the closing day | Deliverables list, simultaneous-exchange requirement |
| 7. Warranties | 20-50 pages | Statements of fact about the target | Knowledge qualifiers, disclosure standard, repetition at completion |
| 8. Limitations on Liability | 5-10 pages | Caps, baskets, time bars, conduct of claims | Aggregate cap %, de minimis, basket type, fundamental-warranty carve-outs |
| 9. Tax Covenant / Tax Deed | 10-20 pages | Pound-for-pound indemnity for pre-completion tax | Recovery from third parties, conduct of tax authorities, overprovisions |
| 10. Restrictive Covenants | 1-3 pages | Non-compete and non-solicit on the sellers | Duration (12-36 months), geographic scope, severance |
| 11. Boilerplate | 5-10 pages | Governing law, jurisdiction, notices, assignment | Arbitration vs court, third-party rights exclusion |
The total page count for a UK SPA on a GBP 50m to GBP 500m deal sits in the 80-150 page range excluding schedules and disclosure letter, per the Practical Law UK Private Acquisitions report 2024. Add the disclosure letter (often 200+ pages of itemised exceptions) and the W&I insurance policy and you are at a 500-page deal bundle.
Share Purchase Agreement vs Asset Purchase Agreement vs US Stock Purchase Agreement
Three documents look superficially similar and trip up first-time deal participants. Understand the distinctions before you read another clause.
| Feature | Share Purchase Agreement (UK / international) | Asset Purchase Agreement (APA) | Stock Purchase Agreement (US) |
|---|---|---|---|
| What transfers | Issued shares in the target company | Specified assets and assumed liabilities | Issued stock in the target corporation |
| Liabilities | All historic liabilities follow the company | Only assumed liabilities pass; others stay with seller | All historic liabilities follow the corporation |
| Governing law | Typically English law (or Singapore, Cayman, BVI, Hong Kong) | Either | Typically Delaware, New York, or California law |
| Tax treatment for seller | UK: BADR 14% on first GBP 1m of qualifying gains (FY26) | Double tax on C-corps; ordinary income on inventory | Capital gain on stock; potential 338(h)(10) election |
| Tax treatment for buyer | No step-up in asset basis; goodwill not amortisable | Step-up in asset basis; goodwill amortisable over 15 years (IRC 197) | No step-up unless 338(h)(10) or 336(e) election |
| Stamp duty | UK: 0.5% stamp duty on share consideration | SDLT on real estate transferred | No US federal stamp duty |
| Document name in market | SPA | APA or BPA | SPA (confusingly the same acronym) |
| Typical length | 80-150 pages | 100-180 pages (because asset schedules) | 60-120 pages |
The acronym collision causes real confusion on transatlantic deals. When a US buyer’s counsel sends “the SPA,” a UK target’s counsel needs to confirm whether they mean a stock purchase agreement (US) or a share purchase agreement (international). If your deal is governed by Delaware law and involves a US-incorporated target, you are working from a US stock purchase agreement, and our guide to the US stock purchase agreement covers that document. This guide focuses on the English-law share purchase agreement that dominates EMEA and Asia-Pacific M&A.
Section 1: Definitions That Quietly Move Millions
The Definitions section reads like a glossary, which lulls inexperienced reviewers into skimming it. That is a mistake. Five definitions in particular routinely shift price by 5-20% depending on how they are drafted.
Cash
“Cash” sounds binary but is not. Restricted cash held against customer deposits or letters of credit is not freely available to the buyer post-completion and should be excluded. Cash trapped in foreign subsidiaries that cannot be repatriated without withholding tax should be excluded or discounted. The Linklaters M&A Insights 2024 survey found cash definition disputes accounted for 18% of post-completion price adjustments on European deals over GBP 100m.
Debt
The deal-team rule of thumb: anything that earns interest, accrues over time, or represents a contractual obligation to pay third parties should be debt. Watch for capitalised operating leases (post-IFRS 16, these sit on balance sheet and are routinely fought over), pension deficits (UK defined-benefit schemes can be eight-figure liabilities), and customer prepayments where revenue has not been recognised.
Working Capital
If you are using a completion-accounts mechanism, the working-capital target is the most negotiated number in the entire SPA. It is normally set as a 12-month rolling average of the target’s actual working capital, calculated on the same accounting policies that will produce the completion accounts. Get the policies wrong (cash vs accruals on a specific item) and the buyer gets a windfall or the seller gets stiffed.
Material Adverse Change (MAC)
The MAC clause lets the buyer walk between signing and closing if the target’s prospects deteriorate. English courts interpret MAC clauses extremely narrowly: in Grupo Hotelero Urvasco SA v Carey Value Added SL [2013] EWHC 1039 (Comm), the High Court held that the change must be of “fundamental importance” and not merely cyclical. For more on US MAC standards, see our material adverse effect guide.
Leakage and Permitted Leakage
In a locked-box transaction (covered below), “Leakage” captures any value transfer from the target to the sellers between the locked-box date and completion. “Permitted Leakage” is the carve-out: agreed management bonuses, scheduled dividends, ordinary-course salary. Anything in Leakage gets repaid by the sellers pound for pound. Anything in Permitted Leakage does not. Drafting this list is where seller’s counsel earns their fee.
Section 3: Consideration Mechanics, Locked-Box vs Completion Accounts
How you set the final price is the single biggest commercial decision in the SPA. UK and European deals overwhelmingly use the locked-box mechanism. US deals overwhelmingly use completion accounts (called “purchase price adjustment” or PPA in US parlance). Both produce a fixed cash price; they get there differently.
| Feature | Locked-Box | Completion Accounts |
|---|---|---|
| Price fixed at | Signing, based on a balance sheet dated before signing | Closing, then trued up 60-120 days post-closing |
| Economic risk passes at | Locked-box date (often 3-6 months pre-completion) | Completion |
| Seller receives interest | Yes, typically 4-8% per annum on equity value from locked-box date to completion | No |
| Post-completion dispute risk | Low (no true-up) | High (expert determination clauses common) |
| Used in % of UK deals | 59% in 2024 (CMS Study) | 32% |
| Used in % of US deals | ~15% | ~70% |
| Best when | Target has clean audited accounts and predictable working capital | Target has lumpy working capital or complex carve-out |
The locked-box mechanism originated in UK private equity exits in the late 1990s and is now the default for sponsor-to-sponsor secondaries. Houlihan Lokey’s 2024 European Private Equity Quarterly reported that locked-box accounted for 72% of European PE buyouts above EUR 250m enterprise value in Q4 2024. The buyer gets price certainty at signing; the seller gets the interest charge on the agreed equity value from the locked-box date to completion.
Completion accounts work differently. The price is provisional at signing, gets settled within 60-120 days after completion based on actual cash, debt, and working capital at the completion date, and runs through an expert-determination process if the parties disagree. Bain & Company’s Global M&A Report 2024 noted that PPA disputes go to expert determination in roughly 8% of transactions and average 14 months to resolve.
Section 4: Conditions Precedent (CPs) and Closing Timeline
CPs are the events that must happen between signing and completion before either party is obliged to close. Get them wrong and you have either (a) a deal that cannot close because a missing CP gives one party a walk right, or (b) a deal that has to close even though regulatory clearance never arrived.
The standard CP list on a UK control deal contains:
- Antitrust clearances. CMA Phase 1 clearance for UK deals where the target has more than GBP 70m UK turnover or a 25% UK supply share, per Enterprise Act 2002 as amended by the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024. For deals with European reach, EU Merger Regulation thresholds (combined worldwide turnover above EUR 5bn and EU turnover above EUR 250m for each of two parties) trigger DG Comp notification.
- Foreign-investment screening. The National Security and Investment Act 2021 requires mandatory notification across 17 sensitive sectors. The Investment Security Unit cleared 1,209 of 1,304 notifications in the year ending 31 March 2025 according to the ISU Annual Report 2025, with average review at 24 working days for accepted notifications.
- FCA / PRA change-of-control approvals. Required for any target holding a UK financial services authorisation; FCA takes up to 60 working days under Part 12 of FSMA 2000.
- Key-customer or supplier consents. Where contracts contain change-of-control termination rights. The buyer normally wants these as CPs; the seller pushes back to “covenants to use reasonable endeavours.”
Drafting the antitrust CP carefully matters because it determines who carries hell-or-high-water risk. A “best efforts” antitrust commitment lets the buyer walk if remedies become onerous. A “hell or high water” commitment forces the buyer to divest whatever is required to clear the deal. Sponsor buyers fight hard against HoHW; corporate buyers sometimes accept it to win competitive auctions.
Section 5: Pre-Completion Covenants and the Ordinary Course Question
Between signing and completion, the seller still operates the target but cannot make decisions that materially affect the buyer’s investment. The pre-completion covenants codify what the seller can and cannot do without buyer consent. The headline restriction: run the business “in the ordinary course consistent with past practice.”
Below that, the SPA typically lists specific consent thresholds:
- No capital expenditure above an agreed cap (often GBP 100k-GBP 500k per item for a mid-market UK deal)
- No new debt above an agreed threshold
- No changes to senior management compensation
- No declaration or payment of dividends (other than Permitted Leakage if locked-box)
- No new contracts above a value or duration threshold
- No litigation settlements above an agreed cap
- No changes to accounting policies
The buyer’s consent right is normally “not to be unreasonably withheld, conditioned or delayed,” with a deemed-consent provision (e.g., 5 business days) to prevent the buyer from running interference. Sponsor buyers with multiple parallel deal teams often have a single named individual responsible for granting consents to avoid bottlenecks.
Section 7: Warranties, Knowledge Qualifiers, and Disclosure
Warranties are statements of fact about the target. If a warranty is untrue at the time it is given (signing) and, if repeated, at completion, the buyer can sue for breach. This is the largest single section of the SPA, typically 80-200 numbered warranties grouped into categories: capacity, title to shares, accounts, business since accounts date, contracts, employment, intellectual property, real estate, environment, tax, litigation, regulatory.
Three drafting battles dominate this section:
Knowledge qualifiers
Some warranties are given “to the seller’s knowledge” or “so far as the seller is aware.” This shifts the risk: if the seller did not know about the breach, no claim. The buyer wants no knowledge qualifier; the seller wants knowledge qualifiers everywhere. The compromise is to define “Knowledge” precisely (e.g., “the actual knowledge of [named persons] having made reasonable enquiry of [named persons]”) and to confine knowledge qualifiers to specific warranties where seller visibility is legitimately limited (e.g., third-party IP infringement, hidden environmental conditions).
Disclosure standard
The seller “discloses against” the warranties by delivering a disclosure letter that lists exceptions. In England, the historic standard was “fair disclosure with sufficient detail to enable the buyer to identify the nature and scope of the matter disclosed” (New Hearts Ltd v Cosmopolitan Investments Ltd [1997] 2 BCLC 249). Modern SPAs make this explicit. Anything fairly disclosed cannot found a warranty claim. The disclosure letter is therefore the single most important document the buyer reads after the SPA itself.
Repetition at completion
Are the warranties repeated at completion? If yes, the seller is on the hook for changes between signing and completion. If no, the buyer carries the risk of any post-signing deterioration. The market norm on UK W&I-insured deals is partial repetition: fundamental warranties (title to shares, capacity, no insolvency) repeated; commercial warranties not repeated. This matches what W&I underwriters will cover.
Section 8: Limitations on Liability, Caps, Baskets, and Time Bars
If a warranty is breached, how much can the buyer recover, when, and how? This section is where the seller protects itself. The standard limitations:
| Limitation | Typical Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Aggregate cap, general warranties | 20-50% of equity value (median 30% on UK PE exits per CMS 2024) | W&I-insured deals: often GBP 1 token cap on seller, with W&I primary |
| Aggregate cap, fundamental warranties | 100% of equity value | Title, capacity, authority always at 100% |
| Aggregate cap, tax covenant | 100% of equity value | Or a separately negotiated tax cap |
| De minimis (per claim threshold) | 0.05-0.2% of equity value | Below this, no claim counts |
| Basket / threshold (aggregate trigger) | 0.5-1% of equity value | First-dollar basket (tipping) vs excess-only basket (deductible) |
| Time bar, commercial warranties | 18-24 months from completion | One audit cycle for the buyer |
| Time bar, tax warranties / covenant | 7 years | Tracks HMRC discovery window |
| Time bar, fundamental warranties | 6-10 years (Limitation Act 1980 limits) | Or no time bar |
The first-dollar basket versus excess-only basket distinction matters more than buyers realise. A first-dollar (tipping) basket means once aggregate claims exceed the threshold, the buyer recovers from pound one. An excess-only (deductible) basket means the buyer recovers only the excess above the threshold. On a GBP 50m deal with a 1% basket, the difference is GBP 500k of recovery on a GBP 500k claim that crosses the threshold.
W&I insurance now dominates UK private M&A. The Howden M&A Insurance Report 2024 reported that 73% of UK private equity exits above GBP 50m enterprise value placed W&I cover in 2024, with average premium of 0.85-1.1% of policy limit and average retention of 0.5% of enterprise value dropping to 0.25% after 12 months.
Section 9: Tax Covenant (Tax Deed)
The tax covenant is a pound-for-pound indemnity against pre-completion tax liabilities that crystallise post-completion. It is separate from the tax warranties because warranties give damages (with the buyer having to prove loss and causation), while the covenant gives indemnification (the seller pays the tax bill directly).
Standard tax-covenant scope:
- All pre-completion tax not provided for in the completion accounts or locked-box balance sheet
- Tax arising from events between the locked-box date (or last accounts date) and completion outside the ordinary course
- Tax payable as a result of the change of control (e.g., loss of group relief, degrouping charges)
- Inheritance tax falling on the target due to pre-completion gifts by the sellers
Standard tax-covenant exclusions:
- Tax provided for in the locked-box accounts or completion accounts
- Tax arising from the buyer’s post-completion actions outside the ordinary course
- Tax that would not have arisen but for a change in law announced after completion
- Tax recoverable from a third party (e.g., insurance or warranty)
The conduct provisions are heavily fought. Who controls a tax dispute with HMRC? The seller usually wants control (because they are paying); the buyer wants control (because the target relationship with HMRC matters going forward). The compromise is normally seller control of historic-period tax audits, buyer control of post-completion years, with the seller having information and consultation rights.
The tax-covenant cap is usually 100% of consideration. Time bar is 7 years for direct tax (matching the HMRC discovery window under section 36 of the Taxes Management Act 1970), 4 years for VAT (matching the section 73 VATA 1994 assessment window).
Section 10: Restrictive Covenants on the Sellers
The buyer is paying for the target’s goodwill, customer relationships, and key-person know-how. If the sellers walk away after completion and immediately set up a competing business, the buyer has bought a depreciating asset. Restrictive covenants prevent this.
Standard scope:
- Non-compete: 24-36 months from completion (UK courts may strike down anything longer as restraint of trade)
- Non-solicit of customers: 24-36 months
- Non-solicit of employees: 12-24 months
- Non-poach of suppliers: 12-24 months
- Confidentiality: Indefinite
English courts assess restrictive covenants for reasonableness in scope, duration, and geography. The seminal authority is Nordenfelt v Maxim Nordenfelt Guns and Ammunition Co Ltd [1894] AC 535, still cited 130 years later. The modern position from Tillman v Egon Zehnder Ltd [2019] UKSC 32 is that courts will sever unreasonable wording to enforce the rest if drafting permits. Sellers’ counsel should never accept overly broad restrictive covenants on the assumption they can be struck down; they may be enforced as drafted.
Locked-Box Mechanics: Worked Example
Locked-box theory is simple; the arithmetic catches people out. Here is a worked example on a GBP 80m equity-value deal.
| Step | Item | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Locked-box date | 31 March 2026 | Date of locked-box balance sheet |
| 2 | Equity value at locked-box date | GBP 80,000,000 | Agreed at signing |
| 3 | Signing date | 30 June 2026 | 3 months after locked-box |
| 4 | Completion date | 30 September 2026 | 6 months after locked-box |
| 5 | Interest rate | 6% per annum | Daily simple, agreed at signing |
| 6 | Interest amount | GBP 2,400,000 | GBP 80m x 6% x 183/365 |
| 7 | Leakage identified at completion | GBP 250,000 | Ex gratia bonus to CFO not in Permitted Leakage list |
| 8 | Cash to sellers at completion | GBP 82,150,000 | GBP 80m + GBP 2.4m interest – GBP 250k leakage |
The key sensitivity is the interest rate. At 6%, the sellers pick up GBP 2.4m over six months. At 4%, they pick up GBP 1.6m. Sellers push for an interest rate matching the target’s cash-on-cash yield (because they have forgone the right to extract that cash). Buyers push for an interest rate matching their cost of debt (because that is what they would otherwise have to fund the holding period). The negotiation typically lands at a SONIA-plus spread or a fixed 4-7% depending on rate environment.
Completion Accounts Mechanics: Worked Example
Completion accounts work in reverse. The buyer pays a provisional price at completion, then it gets trued up against actuals.
| Step | Item | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Enterprise value | GBP 100,000,000 | Agreed at signing |
| 2 | Estimated cash at completion | GBP 12,000,000 | Seller’s pre-closing estimate |
| 3 | Estimated debt at completion | GBP 25,000,000 | Seller’s pre-closing estimate |
| 4 | Working capital target | GBP 8,000,000 | 12-month rolling average |
| 5 | Estimated working capital at completion | GBP 8,500,000 | Seller’s pre-closing estimate |
| 6 | Estimated equity value at completion | GBP 87,500,000 | GBP 100m + GBP 12m – GBP 25m + (GBP 8.5m – GBP 8m) |
| 7 | Provisional cash paid at completion | GBP 87,500,000 | |
| 8 | Actual cash per completion accounts (90 days later) | GBP 11,200,000 | GBP 800k below estimate |
| 9 | Actual debt per completion accounts | GBP 25,400,000 | GBP 400k above estimate |
| 10 | Actual working capital per completion accounts | GBP 8,200,000 | GBP 300k below estimate |
| 11 | True-up payment from sellers to buyer | GBP 1,500,000 | GBP 800k + GBP 400k + GBP 300k |
| 12 | Final equity value | GBP 86,000,000 | GBP 87.5m – GBP 1.5m |
This is where expert determination clauses earn their keep. If the buyer’s accountant says working capital was GBP 7.8m and the seller’s accountant says GBP 8.4m, the SPA names an independent expert (often a Big Four partner or a specialist forensic accountant from Grant Thornton, BDO, or Mazars) whose determination is final and binding. The expert is bound by the accounting policies set out in a schedule to the SPA.
W&I Insurance: How It Changes the Negotiation
Warranty and indemnity insurance is now standard on UK private M&A above GBP 50m enterprise value. Instead of the sellers carrying contingent liability for warranty breaches, an insurer takes the risk for a premium. This shifts the negotiation in three ways.
First, the seller cap collapses to a nominal GBP 1 (or sometimes 0.5% of enterprise value for a “stretched” structure). The buyer’s recovery is from the insurer, not from the sellers personally. This is critical on PE exits where the LPs receive distributions and the fund vehicle is being wound down. Without W&I, distributions would have to be held back in escrow for the warranty period.
Second, the underwriter becomes a third party at the SPA negotiation table. The underwriter reads the SPA, the disclosure letter, the diligence reports, and the data-room index. They will exclude from cover anything they consider materially under-disclosed or commercially unreasonable. Pre-completion underwriting calls between the buyer, the underwriter, and the diligence advisors are now standard.
Third, the warranty package gets more granular. Insurers price W&I premiums based on the granularity and breadth of the warranty schedule. A buyer who accepts a thin warranty package is paying for thinner cover. Modern UK SPAs run to 150-200 specific warranties to maximise insurance coverage.
Howden 2024 average pricing: premium 0.85-1.1% of policy limit, retention 0.5% of enterprise value dropping to 0.25% after 12 months, policy limit typically 25-40% of enterprise value, term 7 years for tax / 2-3 years for general / 7 years for fundamental. AIG, Liberty Mutual, Tokio Marine HCC, Euclid Transactional, and CFC Underwriting are the main underwriters in the London market.
Earn-Outs and Deferred Consideration
Where the buyer and seller cannot agree on price, they sometimes bridge the gap with an earn-out: part of consideration paid after completion contingent on the target hitting performance milestones. Earn-outs feature in roughly 22% of UK private M&A deals per the CMS 2024 study, rising to 41% on owner-managed business sales.
Standard earn-out structure:
- Period: 12-36 months (longer than 36 months invites accounting drift)
- Metric: EBITDA most common, revenue second most common, gross profit third
- Cap: Yes, almost always; uncapped earn-outs are rare
- Acceleration: Full payment if buyer terminates earn-out period without cause, or sells the target during the period
- Operating covenants: The buyer agrees to run the earn-out business in good faith and not take actions that would frustrate the earn-out (no transfer pricing manipulation, no fire-sale pricing)
Earn-out disputes are the most common form of post-completion litigation. The English authority of Porton Capital Technology Funds v 3M UK Holdings Ltd [2011] EWHC 2895 (Comm) established that an earn-out reasonable-efforts obligation is enforceable and that a buyer cannot starve the earn-out business of resources to depress the metric.
Stamp Duty and the SH03 Filing
UK share transfers attract stamp duty at 0.5% on consideration. The mechanics:
- Completion: parties execute stock transfer form (J30 for fully-paid shares, J10 for partly-paid) and SPA
- Within 30 days of completion: buyer’s solicitor lodges stock transfer form with HMRC Stamp Office in Birmingham with payment
- HMRC stamps the form (digitally since November 2021 per HMRC reform)
- Buyer’s solicitor delivers stamped stock transfer form to target’s company secretary with form SH03
- Target updates its register of members and issues new share certificates
- Target files form SH03 at Companies House within 30 days (this is a separate filing from the stock transfer)
Reliefs from stamp duty:
- Intra-group relief under section 76 Finance Act 1986 for transfers between 75% group companies (subject to claw-back if degrouping within 3 years)
- Reconstruction relief under section 75 FA 1986 for genuine corporate reconstructions
- Acquisition relief under section 77 FA 1986 for share-for-share swaps
Get the stamp duty wrong and the company’s register of members cannot be updated, meaning the buyer has equitable title only, not legal title. This is a common audit-trail problem on multi-jurisdictional carve-outs where the deal team forgets the UK component.
Cross-Border SPAs: BVI, Cayman, Singapore, and Hong Kong
English-law SPA templates are exported widely because English contract drafting is regarded as the international gold standard. Variations by jurisdiction:
| Jurisdiction | Stamp Duty | Foreign Investment Screening | Typical Governing Law Choice |
|---|---|---|---|
| British Virgin Islands | None on share transfers in BVI Business Companies | None for non-resident buyers | BVI law or English law |
| Cayman Islands | None on share transfers in Cayman exempted companies | None for exempted companies | Cayman law or English law |
| Singapore | 0.2% on consideration or NAV (whichever higher) | Significant Investments Review Act 2024 for designated entities | Singapore law or English law |
| Hong Kong | 0.2% (0.1% buyer + 0.1% seller) | None for general M&A | Hong Kong law or English law |
| Ireland | 1% on consideration (since FA 2023, with 7.5% for residential) | Investment Screening Mechanism since Jan 2025 | Irish law or English law |
| Jersey / Guernsey | None on share transfers | None for general M&A | Channel Islands law or English law |
The choice between local law and English law is largely commercial. English law is well-developed, predictable, and familiar to international counsel; local law is mandatory for certain regulated industries and may be required by local registries.
Putting It Together: TLDR and Takeaways for Practitioners
A share purchase agreement is not a generic template; it is the codification of a specific commercial deal. The clauses look standard but the choices inside them – locked-box vs completion accounts, fundamental vs general warranty caps, knowledge qualifiers, MAC drafting, earn-out metrics – move millions of pounds in either direction depending on who drafted what.
The practitioner takeaways:
- Definitions are not glossary entries; they are price levers. Cash, Debt, Working Capital, Leakage, and MAC each determine final consideration. Read them as if they were the price clause, because they are.
- Locked-box dominates UK PE exits; completion accounts dominate US deals. If you are on a transatlantic deal, decide consideration mechanics before drafting starts. Switching mid-process burns weeks of legal time.
- W&I changes everything. If you are above GBP 50m enterprise value, the W&I underwriter is the third party at every negotiation. Brief them early and let them shape the warranty package.
- Conditions precedent are walk rights. A CP that fails the closing test is the strongest hold either party has between signing and completion. Draft tightly; do not paper over operational consents as “covenants.”
- Tax covenants are not warranties. They are pound-for-pound indemnities. Confirm tax-team sign-off on the deed before signing the SPA.
- Restrictive covenants get tested under English common law and may be enforced as drafted. Both sides should treat the scope as serious commercial restraint, not boilerplate.
- Stamp duty is small but mandatory. A 30-day filing deadline and a register-of-members gating step that cannot be skipped.
If you are advising on or executing a share purchase agreement, the references below cover the underlying law and market practice. Start with the Practical Law UK Private Acquisitions Toolkit and the CMS European M&A Study, then layer in the firm-specific precedent guidance from your chosen lead counsel. For the deal team disciplines that surround the SPA, see our guides to the M&A advisor role, business valuation formulas, and how to determine business value. If your deal involves a debt-financed sponsor buyer, our LBO model walkthrough shows how the price you negotiate in the SPA flows through to fund-level returns. And if you are weighing the share-deal versus asset-deal trade-off on the seller’s side, our installment sale comparison covers the parallel US tax structuring question.
Primary Sources and Further Reading
- Companies Act 2006
- Enterprise Act 2002 as amended by the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024
- National Security and Investment Act 2021
- Taxes Management Act 1970, section 36
- Finance Act 1986, section 76
- Limitation Act 1980
- Practical Law UK Private Acquisitions Toolkit 2024
- CMS European M&A Study 2024
- Linklaters M&A Insights 2024
- Freshfields M&A Monthly 2024
- Slaughter and May Briefings: Private M&A 2024
- Clifford Chance Talking Tech and M&A Insights 2024
- Allen Overy Shearman M&A Insights 2024
- Wachtell Lipton Memos on US M&A 2024
- Cooley M&A Resources
- Skadden M&A Insights 2024
- Davis Polk M&A Briefings 2024
- Latham Watkins M&A Resources 2024
- Sullivan Cromwell M&A Memos 2024
- Kirkland Ellis M&A and PE Newsletters 2024
- Sidley Austin M&A Insights 2024
- Houlihan Lokey 2024 European Private Equity Quarterly
- Lincoln International Mid-Market Perspectives 2024
- Lazard Capital Markets Update 2024
- Goldman Sachs M&A Outlook 2024
- Morgan Stanley Investment Banking Insights 2024
- Wall Street Journal M&A Deals Coverage
- Bloomberg Deals Coverage
- Reuters M&A Coverage
- Pitchbook M&A Reports 2024
- Bain Global M&A Report 2024
- The Tax Adviser, AICPA 2024
- Tax Notes M&A Coverage 2024
- Journal of Accountancy 2024
- Wall Street Oasis PE Forum
- Mergers and Inquisitions M&A Career Resources
- Carta Equity Insights 2024
- Howden M&A Insurance Report 2024
- AIG M&A Insurance Reports 2024