About me
We want to ensure that companies and individuals are taking advantage of all available tax reliefs, whilst ensuring compliance with ever expanding tax legislation.
I am a Tax Director at Wilson Partners. I joined the company in 2016, having previously spent four years in house with FTSE listed companies and six years at Grant Thornton in the Corporate tax team.
My role here is advise clients on all tax matters, specifically tax structuring projects, corporate transactions and R&D tax reliefs. I like to work with ambitious companies and find ways to ease the tax burden through careful tax planning.
The things that first attracted me to Wilson Partners were the great people, the ambitious growth plans and the outstanding clients. We have an excellent team and are going from strength to strength.
Find out more about Steve. See Steve’s latest video.
Steve’s latest videos
Tax at Wilson Partners with Steve Lawrey, Bhav Nesbitt & Sarah Clarke-Rae
The tax team at Wilson Partners support businesses, from start-up to exit, along with the individuals behind the business with […]
Read Steve's latest insights
Tax mistakes are becoming more expensive. Here’s why.
If it feels like HMRC is taking a closer look at small businesses, the numbers suggest that’s exactly what’s happening.…
June 2026 – Tax News
This month’s update covers increases to tax-free mileage rates, a temporary VAT reduction for certain family-focused activities, new dividend reporting…
May 2026 – Tax News
Under MTD for Income Tax, individuals are required to keep digital records and submit updates to HMRC on a quarterly…
April 2026 – Tax News
With each new tax year comes a raft of updates, rates, thresholds and legislation. Here are the key changes from…
Spring Forecast 2026: What the OBR’s latest forecast means for you
During a week dominated by news of the Middle East conflict, Chancellor Rachel Reeves presented the UK’s Spring Forecast to…
March 2026 – Tax News
In line with the government’s commitment to holding just one major fiscal event each year, the Spring Forecast did not…
