Tax

Making Tax Digital (MTD) Guide UK — What You Need to Know

Understand Making Tax Digital — who it affects, when it starts, what software you need, and how to prepare for HMRC's digital tax reporting requirements.

Tax information is based on HMRC rules for the 2026/27 tax year. Tax rules can change — always verify current rates at GOV.UK. This is not tax advice. Consider consulting a qualified tax adviser for your personal situation.

Making Tax Digital (MTD) is the biggest change to UK tax administration in decades. It replaces traditional annual tax returns with digital record-keeping and quarterly reporting — affecting millions of self-employed people and landlords. Here is what you need to know and how to prepare.

What Is Changing

Under MTD, instead of filing one annual Self Assessment return, you will:

  1. Keep digital records of income and expenses using compatible software
  2. Submit quarterly updates to HMRC (roughly every three months)
  3. Submit a final declaration at the end of the tax year to confirm your figures

This replaces the traditional paper-based or manual spreadsheet approach with a real-time digital connection between your records and HMRC.

Who Is Affected and When

MTD Timeline

Date Who Must Comply
Already live VAT-registered businesses (since April 2022)
April 2026 Self-employed and landlords with income over £50,000
April 2027 Self-employed and landlords with income over £30,000
TBC Those with income over £20,000 (date not yet set)

Income here means your total gross business or rental income — not profit. If your self-employment turnover is £55,000 but your profit is £35,000, you still fall within the April 2026 threshold.

Who Is Not Affected (Yet)

  • Employed individuals with no self-employment or rental income
  • Self-employed or landlords with income under the current threshold
  • Companies — corporation tax has a separate digital reporting system
  • Partners in partnerships — specific MTD dates for partnerships are being confirmed separately

What You Need to Do

1. Check If You Are In Scope

If your self-employment income, rental income, or combination of both exceeds the relevant threshold, you must comply from the respective date.

2. Choose Compatible Software

HMRC maintains a list of MTD-compatible software. Options include:

Software Monthly Cost Best For
FreeAgent From £12/month Sole traders, freelancers
QuickBooks From £10/month Small businesses
Xero From £14/month Growing businesses, accountants
Sage From £12/month Traditional businesses
HMRC’s free tools £0 Very simple affairs
Bridging software Varies Those wanting to keep spreadsheets

Bridging software allows you to continue keeping records in a spreadsheet and submit via a compatible “bridge” to HMRC. This is the minimum-change option for those comfortable with spreadsheets.

3. Set Up Digital Record-Keeping

Your software must maintain digital records of:

  • All business income (each transaction or summary per customer)
  • All business expenses (categorised and recorded)
  • Any adjustments (personal use, capital allowances, etc.)

If you currently keep paper receipts in a shoebox or track income in a basic spreadsheet, you will need to transition to a digital system.

4. Submit Quarterly Updates

Approximately every three months, your software submits a summary of your income and expenses to HMRC. The quarterly periods broadly follow:

Quarter Period
Q1 6 April – 5 July
Q2 6 July – 5 October
Q3 6 October – 5 January
Q4 6 January – 5 April

You will have approximately one month after each quarter end to submit. These are estimates, not final figures — you can adjust them later.

5. Year-End Finalisation

After the tax year ends, you submit a final declaration confirming your income, expenses, and any adjustments. This replaces the Self Assessment tax return for income within scope.

MTD for VAT (Already Live)

If you are VAT-registered, MTD for VAT has been mandatory since April 2022. You must:

  • Keep digital VAT records
  • Submit VAT returns through compatible software
  • Maintain digital links between your records and the submission

The same software typically handles both VAT and income tax submissions.

Costs of Making Tax Digital

Cost Typical Amount
Compatible software £0–£170/year
Accountant (if using one) May increase slightly
Time spent learning software Variable
Set-up and data migration 1–5 hours typically

The government acknowledges that MTD imposes additional costs on small businesses. However, their position is that better record-keeping and fewer errors will ultimately save time and reduce tax over/underpayments.

How to Prepare Now

Even if your threshold date is not immediate:

  1. Start using digital accounting software — the sooner you adopt it, the easier the transition
  2. Digitise your records — move from paper to digital receipts and transaction logging
  3. Talk to your accountant — they can advise on the best software for your situation
  4. Separate business and personal finances — a dedicated business bank account makes digital record-keeping much simpler
  5. Review your income — check whether you are above the threshold and when you need to comply
  6. Use the self-employment tax calculator to estimate your quarterly figures

Penalties for Non-Compliance

HMRC is implementing a points-based penalty system for MTD:

  • Each late quarterly submission earns a penalty point
  • After reaching a threshold of points (initially 4), a £200 penalty applies for each further late submission
  • Late payment penalties accrue as a percentage of the outstanding tax

The system replaces the old fixed-penalty approach and is designed to be more proportionate — occasional late submissions are tolerated, but a pattern of non-compliance is penalised.

Sources

  1. HMRC — Making Tax Digital