The United Kingdom ecommerce market is expected to reach $335.67 billion in 2025, growing at 6.5% annually to hit $431.12 billion by 2029 . Mobile devices drive 72% of all online purchases, with apparel and footwear claiming 38% of the market share .
You are ready to grab your piece of this growth. Building an online store in the UK is easier than you think, but you need a guide that speaks to our local laws and customer habits.
I will show you exactly how to build an online store that works for British customers. This step by step tutorial covers everything from Companies House registration to getting paid in pounds.
We are using the Truehost online shop builder. Our servers are located in the UK, which keeps your website fast and your data compliant with local rules.
Step 1: Register your company with Companies House

You cannot just throw up a website and hope for the best. UK law requires proper registration if you are setting up a limited company.
Visit the Companies House website to register your company online. The process takes about 10 minutes to complete the form, and you will usually receive confirmation within 24 hours .
You need to prepare a few things beforehand. Choose a company name that is not the same as any existing registered name. Pick a registered office address where official correspondence will go. Have a registered email address ready to receive Companies House communications .
You will also need at least one SIC code, which is a five digit code that describes your main business activity. For example, if you sell clothing online, you would use the code for retail sale via mail order houses or via internet .
The fee for online registration is £50, payable by debit or credit card. If you prefer to register by post, the fee rises to £71 and processing takes eight to ten working days .
Once approved, you receive a Certificate of Incorporation. This legal document confirms your company name, registration number, date of incorporation, and whether you are registered in England and Wales or Scotland .
If you are operating as a sole trader, you do not need to register with Companies House. However, you must register with HMRC for Self Assessment and complete a tax return every year .
Step 2: Register for taxes with HMRC
You need to register for Corporation Tax within three months of starting to do business. This applies whether you are a limited company or a sole trader .
Register for VAT if your taxable turnover exceeds the threshold of £90,000 per year. Many new businesses choose to register voluntarily even before crossing this threshold, because you can then claim back VAT on the goods and services you buy .
If you plan to hire employees, you must register for PAYE (Pay As You Earn) to handle their income tax and National Insurance contributions .
Keep proper records from day one. Your company must maintain statutory registers including a register of directors and a register of people with significant control (PSCs). A PSC is someone who holds more than 25% of the company‘s shares or voting rights .
Step 3: Choose a UK web host with local servers
This is where most beginners make a costly mistake. They sign up for cheap international hosting with servers in America or Asia, which makes their website slow for British visitors.
Truehost keeps everything local. Our servers are based in the United Kingdom, which means your website loads quickly for customers in London, Manchester, Edinburgh, and Cardiff. Fast loading speeds directly affect your sales and your search engine ranking.
Our hosting starts from just £5 per year, which works out to less than £0.42 per month . We include a free .uk domain name with annual plans, saving you roughly £10 to £15 on registration fees.
Free SSL certificate comes with every plan. Google marks sites without SSL as “Not Secure”, and British customers will bounce immediately when they see that warning.
Unlike some hosts that lure you in with a cheap first year then hike the price by 900% on renewal, our pricing stays stable. What you pay in year one is close to what you pay in year two .
Step 4: Use the AI website builder to build your online store fast

You do not need to hire a developer or learn complicated code. The Truehost AI Website Builder does the heavy lifting for you.
Log into your Truehost dashboard and select the AI builder option. Type one sentence describing your business, for example: “I sell handmade candles and home fragrances to customers across the UK.”
The AI generates a complete homepage, product gallery, contact page, and about page within seconds. It studies successful ecommerce layouts and gives you a professional design that works perfectly on mobile phones.
For the online shop specifically, the AI populates your store with placeholder products. It sets up the shopping cart buttons and checkout flow automatically. You just replace the dummy products with your real inventory and pricing.
You can drag and drop anything you want to change. The AI does not lock you into a rigid template. You stay in full control, but you start at 80% completion instead of staring at a blank screen.
Step 5: Set up payment gateways that British customers actually
Here is the truth: you need multiple payment options. Debit and credit cards remain the dominant choice, capturing 53% of the market share in 2025 .
But 10% of consumers abandon their carts when they do not see their preferred payment method, and 19% walk away because they do not trust the site‘s security with their card information .
Stripe is the easiest option for new UK businesses. Signup takes minutes, and you can start accepting card payments immediately. No monthly fees, just a transaction fee of around 1.4% to 2.9% plus 20p per successful charge.
PayPal remains extremely popular with British shoppers. Many customers prefer it because they do not need to type their card details on a new website. The trust factor alone makes PayPal worth adding.
GoCardless specialises in bank to bank payments, which is excellent if you run a subscription business or sell services with recurring billing. It integrates seamlessly with accounting platforms like Xero and QuickBooks .
If you plan to sell internationally, consider Unlimit or Checkout.com. These gateways support over 1,000 payment methods and settlements in nearly 150 currencies, which matters if you want to expand beyond the UK .
Always display trust signals. British customers care about security. Show your payment gateway logos clearly near the checkout button and link to your privacy policy.
Step 6: Display your legal information on the website
UK company websites must display specific business information by law. These requirements come from the Companies (Trading Disclosures) Regulations 2008 and the Electronic Commerce Regulations 2002 .
Your website footer must include your registered company name (not just your trading name), company registration number, place of registration (England and Wales, Scotland, or Northern Ireland), registered office address, and VAT number if applicable .
You also need a privacy policy that explains what personal data you collect, why you collect it, how long you keep it, who you share it with, and what rights your users have to access or delete their data .
Cookies and tracking require special attention. Under PECR and UK GDPR, you must get explicit consent before dropping any non essential cookies. This includes advertising pixels, behavioural tracking tools, retargeting technologies, and most analytics cookies .
Your cookie banner cannot use pre ticked boxes or implied consent. Users must actively accept or reject non essential cookies. The maximum penalty for non compliance is £17.5 million or 4% of your global annual turnover .
If you sell products online, the Consumer Contracts Regulations 2013 require you to display full pricing inclusive of VAT, delivery details and timelines, a clear explanation of the ordering process, cancellation and refund rights, and accurate product descriptions .
This sounds like a lot, but once you set these pages up correctly, they stay mostly static. Do it properly at the start to avoid fines and customer disputes later.
Step 7: Set up shipping and delivery options

British customers expect reasonable delivery times and transparent pricing. You have several excellent options for sending parcels.
Royal Mail is the most recognisable name in UK delivery. For a small parcel up to 2kg, Tracked 48 costs around £3.65 and arrives in two to three working days. Tracked 24 costs around £4.65 for next day delivery .
Evri (formerly Hermes) often works out cheaper for similar weights. For a 0 to 1kg parcel, Evri charges about £3.29 compared to Royal Mail‘s £3.65. For parcels between 2 and 5kg, Evri charges approximately £6.59 versus Royal Mail’s £7.35 .
For heavier items, UPS Standard delivers within one to two working days for a very competitive £6.59 for a 10kg package. UPS Express arrives by 12pm the next day for around £13.79 .
Consider offering free shipping on orders over a certain threshold, say £40 or £50. Many customers add extra items just to qualify for free delivery. Just make sure your product pricing covers the postage cost on those larger orders.
The busiest online shopping days in the UK are typically around Black Friday, Cyber Monday, and the weeks leading up to Christmas. Prepare your shipping capacity for these surges well in advance.
Step 8: Protect customer data and follow UK GDPR
The UK operates its own data protection regime, separate from the EU. UK GDPR remains the foundation, but the Data Use and Access Act (DUAA), which received Royal Assent in October 2025, introduces significant changes starting in 2026 .
From February 2026, the DUAA introduces recognised legitimate interest as a seventh legal basis for processing data, something that does not exist under EU GDPR . From June 2026, new complaints handling obligations take effect, requiring your platform to update how it routes and resolves customer data requests .
The Cyber Security and Resilience Bill is also making its way through Parliament, with Royal Assent expected in spring 2026. This bill expands security requirements to cover managed service providers and data centres for the first time, with penalties reaching £17 million or 4% of global turnover .
For now, focus on the basics. Use strong passwords on your Truehost dashboard and enable two factor authentication. Most security breaches happen because someone used a weak password like “password123” for their admin login.
If you process payment card information, you must comply with PCI DSS standards. Most payment gateways handle the heavy lifting here, but you still need to follow their integration guides carefully.
Step 9: Launch and start selling
Set a firm launch date and tell everyone about it. Your first 100 customers will likely be friends, family, and their referrals.
Add at least 20 products before you launch. An empty store looks abandoned and kills trust. Use the AI to generate product descriptions and then personalise them with your own voice.
Test the entire checkout process yourself. Buy something from your own store using every payment method you have set up. Make sure the confirmation email arrives and the order shows up correctly in your dashboard.
The peak shopping hours in the UK are typically weekday evenings between 8pm and 10pm, plus weekend afternoons. Your site needs to perform when people are relaxing on their sofas, browsing on their phones.
Your next move
Stop reading and start doing. Go to Truehost.co.uk and grab our Starter plan, with hosting from just £5 per year. Your free .uk domain is included with annual plans.
Here is what you get: UK based servers for fast local speeds, free SSL certificate, an AI builder that designs your shop in minutes, and 24/7 support from real people.
The British ecommerce market is growing steadily at 6.5% annually and will exceed £250 billion by the end of the decade. You are not late to this party, you are right on time.
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