UK’s NatWest and Beauhurst’s New Startup Index Reports 468,000 New Firms Started Up in H1 2024

NatWest and Beauhurst’s New Startup Index reports 468,000 new companies started up in the first half of 2024 – a 6% increase compared to the same period last year.

In a sign of the strong potential of the UK economy, 468,000 new firms “have started up in the first half of 2024,” according to the New Startup Index by Beauhurst and supported by NatWest.

This brings the number of companies “operating in the UK to 5.47m, with new businesses primarily operating in wholesale, retail and professional services as of June 2024.”

The UK has experienced “a significant uplift in new businesses in recent years, with numbers growing from 173,000 in the first quarter of 2020 to 248,000 in the first quarter of 2024—marking a 43.4% increase.”

Across the UK regions, London led the way in “the first half of 2024 with 161,000 new business incorporations, the highest across all regions.”

The regions of the West Midlands and Yorkshire and the Humber also “experienced notable growth rates of 10.1% and 8.15%, respectively.”

This coincides with new analysis “by Beauhurst which shows that businesses on NatWest’s free accelerator program are more likely to generate higher turnover growth, raise more investment and have better survival rates than other similar businesses.”

Businesses on NatWest’s accelerator program “stand a greater chance of raising investment which rose by 70.5% on average over a three-year period, according to data published by the bank.”

Accelerator businesses also recorded turnover growth “that was on average 35% higher than other similar businesses.”

And in an environment where just “over half of start-ups typically survive the first three years in business, 9 out of 10 businesses on the NatWest accelerator were still trading three years later.”

Paul Thwaite, NatWest Group CEO, said:

“The UK’s potential for growth is made clear by the numbers of people now starting their own businesses. Small businesses are the lifeblood of our economy, accounting for three-fifths of employment and about half of the private sector’s turnover. If these new businesses are given the right conditions to succeed, they could significantly boost the UK economy.”

As noted in the update:

“Across the UK, NatWest Group is helping more businesses get started than any other bankvi. We play a key role in giving start-ups the tools to scale and succeed – with data from our accelerator showing our support significantly boosts businesses’ turnover, investment and chances of survival.”

As stated in the announcement:

“This September we are taking our commitment to small businesses up a level by over doubling the amount of free places on our Accelerator program, to 2,500 businesses. We are creating the environment where businesses have the support, guidance and conditions they need to thrive – because when small businesses succeed, the UK succeeds.”

Business and Trade Secretary Jonathan Reynolds said:

“Our mission is to bring economic growth and make the UK the best place to start-up and scale-up business. However, we can only achieve this by working in partnership with the private sector. That is why it’s good to see accelerator schemes like this play a positive role in giving businesses the boost they need to invest and grow, and it’s exciting to see these figures show signs of optimism for our start-up sector.”

Henry Whorwood, Managing Director at Beauhurst, said:

“Certain aspects of the economy are firing on all cylinders. UK entrepreneurs are still starting lots of new businesses. This may mark the beginning of a new normal with higher rates of entrepreneurship in the UK economy than known previously.”

Data sources

Beauhurst data is the primary data source for this report.

This data includes data “from public sources (inc. from Companies House) which includes self-reported data by companies.”

Data on new company incorporations is “derived from the public records from Companies House.”

The dataset encompasses new company incorporations “in the UK over a five-year period from 2020 to 2024.”

The report’s findings are based on the “accuracy of the information provided by companies to Companies House, given this any discrepancies or inaccuracies in self-reporting may influence the data analysis.”



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