The Charity Commission itself does not charge a fee to process your application. However, you should budget for agency or legal fees (£200 - £1,500+) if you use a professional to ensure compliance, draft your constitution, and handle the paperwork.
Founders are often surprised to learn that forming a charity isn't inherently expensive in terms of government fees, but the cost of getting the legalities right can vary wildly.
Government Fees
Registering a CIO or a trust with the Charity Commission is entirely free. If you register a charitable company, you will have to pay a small incorporation fee to Companies House (around £12-£50 depending on the method), but the charity registration itself remains free.
Professional Services
Because the application requires precise legal drafting, many founders use agencies or solicitors. A bespoke solicitor could charge upwards of £1,500. Dedicated charity registration agencies typically charge between £200 and £500 to draft your objects, supply governance templates, and manage the submission.
Hidden launch costs
Beyond the paperwork, budget for your initial digital infrastructure: domain names, web hosting, basic branding, and initial public liability/trustee indemnity insurance. A realistic total launch budget is usually around £500 to £1,000.
You can do it for free on your own. But we frequently see DIY founders spend 40 hours wrestling with the portal, get rejected, and end up paying an agency anyway. Your time as a founder is valuable; spend it raising money, not fighting bureaucracy.
Key takeaways
- The Charity Commission portal is free to use.
- Professional registration agencies offer a cost-effective middle ground between DIY and expensive lawyers.
- Factor in initial insurance and digital infrastructure to your launch budget.
We offer transparent, fixed-fee registration packages starting at £899. Let us handle the admin. Explore our [charity registration services](/charities/charity-registration).