For a company to claim under the Patent Box scheme it must:
Profits relating to patent rights are taxed at 10% rather than the full rate of corporation tax applicable to that company. The benefit is taken as a deduction in the profits chargeable to corporation tax in the same manner as R&D tax relief and therefore the two reliefs can complement each other. The patent box deduction can therefore increase a tax loss that can be surrendered to obtain cash, or can be a straight tax saving.
A company makes profit of £100,000 licensing the rights to a patent that the company holds.
Adjustments are made to reduce the relevant profit in relation to the provisions of the Patent Box scheme. For example in this illustration, the adjustment is £10,000.
The result is that the profit of £90,000 is taxed at 10% rather than the main rate of corporation tax (e.g. 20%). The corporation tax saving to the company at 10% is £9,000.

