A striking pattern is emerging across the Atlantic. American business owners are increasingly selling their companies to their employees, and they are looking to the United Kingdom for the blueprint. The mechanism in question: the Employee Ownership Trust (EOT). Built on a tax-advantaged model introduced in 2014, the EOT allows a company to be transferred to a trust that holds shares on behalf of all employees. The result is a business owned by its workforce, with no upfront cost to the employees and significant tax relief for the seller.
Data from the Employee Ownership Association shows that the number of EOTs in the UK has grown from just 40 in 2014 to over 1,000 in 2024. This growth is not accidental. The model is structurally sound. The seller pays no capital gains tax on the sale. The trust uses future profits to buy out the owner over time. Employees receive tax-free bonuses of up to £3,600 per year. It is a triple win: liquidity for the owner, motivation for the workforce, and business continuity.
The appeal for American entrepreneurs is clear. John Moore, a manufacturing magnate from Ohio who converted his family firm to an EOT last year, describes it as “returning the business to the people who built it”. Speaking at a recent conference in London, he noted that the UK’s EOT legislation is “simply better designed” than US options like ESOPs. ESOPs require complex valuations and bank loans. EOTs require a trust and a plan. That simplicity is a feature, not a bug.
But this is no charity. The physics of employee ownership are straightforward. When workers own equity, their interests align with the long-term health of the company. A 2021 study by the University of Oxford found that EOT-owned companies have higher productivity and lower turnover than their traditionally owned peers. The trust structure also insulates the business from takeovers: the trust cannot sell a controlling stake, so the company remains independent in perpetuity.
British businesses are taking note. Richer Sounds, the hi-fi retailer, became an EOT in 2019. Founder Julian Richer said it was “the natural next step”. The company has since outperformed its sector. Aupair, a care provider, converted in 2021. Its CEO Andrew Whelan reported that staff engagement scores rose 20% in the first year.
Yet the model is not without tension. Critics argue that EOTs can become cosy clubs that resist innovation. The trust structure can make it difficult to raise external capital, as the trust must retain majority ownership. And there is a subtle psychological hurdle: employees who own the business must also answer to the same management. The line between owner and worker blurs.
None of these caveats slow the momentum. The UK government is actively promoting EOTs as part of its “levelling up” agenda. In the US, the Employee Ownership Expansion Network is lobbying for federal legislation that mirrors the British model. The next phase may be global. Australia and Canada are examining similar trust structures.
The trend carries a deeper signal. In an era of asset inflation and intergenerational inequality, employee ownership offers a pathway to distribute wealth without seizure. It is a market-based solution that requires no central planning. The data are clear: businesses that treat workers as owners tend to survive longer, pay better, and invest more in training.
This is not a story of altruism. It is a story of structural efficiency. The EOT is a tool that realigns incentives. American businessmen are realising this. They are looking to the UK not for culture or tradition, but for a proven legal framework. The quiet revolution is already underway.
As Dr. Helena Vance would say: the data do not lie. Employee ownership trusts are a scalable, sustainable model for business transition. The planet’s climate crisis demands rapid reorganisation of capital. So does the less existential but equally pressing crisis of employee disengagement. Perhaps the two problems share a solution.








