Employee Ownership Trusts (EOTs) are flexible. In practice they fit companies of essentially any size and any industry, which is part of why they are growing in popularity relative to ESOPs.
The practical floor:
- Enough employees — roughly 10 or more, so that broad-based employee ownership and profit-sharing are meaningful.
- Enough net income to comfortably cover the trustee's ongoing cost (on the order of $15,000 a year), with margin to spare.
Where an EOT tends to fit well:
- Owners who want to preserve the company's mission, jobs, and independence rather than sell to a competitor or financial buyer.
- Companies that are profitable and stable enough to sustain the trust's ongoing obligations.
- Situations where the simplicity and flexibility of a trust is preferable to the regulatory complexity and cost of an ESOP.
If you are weighing an EOT against an ESOP or a worker cooperative, the deciding factors are usually the owner's tax situation and goals and how much governance change the team wants, more than the company's size or industry.
The tax treatment and cost figures above reflect the US context; the UK has its own EOT regime with distinct thresholds and reliefs, so confirm which rules apply to you.
This is general information, not legal or tax advice; consult a qualified advisor before acting.