A fractional CTO is an experienced technology leader who works with your business part-time and ongoing, rather than as a full-time hire. They set technical direction, make build-or-buy decisions, oversee delivery and keep your technology aligned with the business, at a fraction of the cost and commitment of a permanent CTO. For most UK SMEs and early-stage startups, it is the gap between needing senior technical judgement and being unable to justify a six-figure salary.
This guide explains what the role actually covers, what it costs, and how to tell whether a fractional CTO is the right answer for you, or whether your situation calls for something else.
What does a fractional CTO actually do?
A fractional CTO owns the technical decisions a business cannot afford to get wrong but does not yet have the in-house seniority to make. That usually means three things: setting strategy, governing delivery, and protecting the business from expensive mistakes.
On strategy, they translate business goals into a technology roadmap, deciding what to build, what to buy, and what to leave alone. On delivery, they oversee engineers or agencies, set standards, and make sure what is being built will actually scale. On risk, they handle the unglamorous essentials: architecture, security, hosting, data, and the decisions that are cheap to make early and ruinous to fix late.
What separates the role from a senior developer is scope. A developer builds what they are asked to build. A fractional CTO decides what should be built, and is accountable for whether the technology serves the business.
What does a fractional CTO cost in the UK?
UK fractional CTO engagements typically run between £6,000 and £16,000 per month, depending on seniority and time commitment. Set against a full-time CTO salary of roughly £150,000 to £220,000 plus equity, benefits and recruitment costs, the saving is substantial, and you can scale the commitment up or down as the business changes.
The pricing reflects what you are really buying: senior judgement applied where it matters, without paying for a full-time executive you cannot yet keep busy. Most engagements are structured as a set number of days per month, which keeps cost predictable and lets you increase involvement during intense periods like a build or a funding round.
The honest caveat is that cheaper is not automatically better. A fractional CTO’s value is in the decisions they prevent you from making badly, so experience and judgement are the things you are paying for, not hours.
Fractional, interim or outsourced: what’s the difference?
These terms are used loosely, but they mean genuinely different things, and choosing the wrong one wastes money.
An interim CTO is full-time but temporary, typically covering a gap, a transition, or a specific crisis for a fixed period. A fractional CTO is part-time and ongoing, a continuing relationship at a few days a month. Outsourced technology leadership delivers the same function through a firm rather than a single individual, which means you get a team’s breadth of skills rather than one person’s.
That last distinction matters more than it sounds. A lone fractional CTO is one person’s knowledge, split across several clients. Outsourced leadership that also delivers means the strategy and the building sit under one roof, with no handoff between the person who decides and the people who deliver. For an SME that needs both direction and execution, that can be the difference between a roadmap that gets written and one that gets shipped.
When does a business actually need one?
A few situations reliably signal that it is time. You are spending real money on software or development but have no senior technical person deciding whether it is the right money. You are a non-technical founder making technology decisions you are not equipped to make. You have been burned by a previous build or agency and want someone in your corner who understands both the technology and the commercial reality. Or you are scaling, and the technical choices you make now will either enable or strangle the next two years of growth.
Conversely, if your needs are genuinely simple, such as a brochure website or an off-the-shelf tool that does the job, you may not need a CTO at all, fractional or otherwise. Part of a good fractional CTO’s value is telling you that honestly.
How is this different from just hiring a developer or an agency?
A developer or a typical agency executes a defined brief. A fractional CTO is accountable for whether the brief is right in the first place. If you already know exactly what to build and simply need it built, you may need builders, not leadership. If you are unsure what to build, how it should be architected, or whether your current technology can carry your plans, that uncertainty is precisely what a fractional CTO resolves.
The strongest setup for many SMEs combines the two: senior technical direction and hands-on delivery, working together, so the decisions and the delivery never come apart.
Frequently asked questions
How much does a fractional CTO cost in the UK?
Most UK engagements run between £6,000 and £16,000 per month, depending on seniority and days per month. That compares with a full-time CTO salary of around £150,000 to £220,000 plus equity and benefits, making the fractional route significantly more cost-effective for businesses that do not need a full-time executive.
What’s the difference between a fractional CTO and an outsourced CTO?
A fractional CTO is usually one part-time individual. Outsourced technology leadership delivers the same strategic function through a firm that both directs and delivers, so you get both direction and the capacity to build, without a handoff between the two.
Can a fractional CTO help if I’m a non-technical founder?
Yes, this is one of the most common reasons to engage one. A fractional CTO makes the technical decisions you are not equipped to make, protects you from costly mistakes, and gives you a trusted technical voice without the cost or permanence of a full-time hire.
How many days a month do I need?
It depends on the stage. An active build or a funding round might need several days a month, while a steady-state product might need one or two. A good engagement flexes with your needs rather than locking you into a fixed retainer you do not use.
Flux Dynamics provides outsourced technology leadership: a fractional CTO who also builds. Strategy and delivery under one roof, with no handoffs. Tell us where you are stuck and we will figure out the right first step together.