Self-Employment Tax UK 2026/27 — Income Tax, National Insurance, Expenses and IR35

Self-Employment Tax Guide UK — A Complete Guide for Sole Traders

Everything self-employed people need to know about tax in the UK. How to register, what you owe, Self Assessment, expenses, and deadlines — all explained clearly.

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.

Going self-employed is one of the most rewarding career decisions you can make — but it also means taking charge of your own tax affairs. This guide walks you through everything a sole trader needs to know about tax in the UK, from registering with HMRC to filing your return and paying what you owe.

Registering as Self-Employed

When you start working for yourself, you must register with HMRC for Self Assessment. The deadline is 5 October in your business’s second tax year. So if you begin trading any time between 6 April 2025 and 5 April 2026, you need to register by 5 October 2026.

You can register online at gov.uk. You’ll need your National Insurance number and some basic details about your business. HMRC will send you a Unique Taxpayer Reference (UTR) number by post — keep this safe, as you’ll need it every time you file.

Don’t delay registration. Late registration can lead to penalties and means HMRC won’t have you on their radar in time for your first tax bill.

Sole Trader vs Limited Company

Most people starting out choose to be a sole trader — it’s simpler and cheaper. But as your profits grow, a limited company structure can become more tax-efficient.

Factor Sole Trader Limited Company
Setup Free — just register with HMRC Register at Companies House (£12 online)
Tax on profits Income Tax (20%/40%/45%) + Class 2 & 4 NI Corporation Tax (25%) + personal tax on salary/dividends
Admin Simple — one Self Assessment return Annual accounts, Confirmation Statement, payroll, Corporation Tax return
Personal liability Unlimited — you are the business Limited to company assets (with some exceptions)
Credibility Less formal More professional perception with some clients
Accountancy costs £150–£400/year typical £600–£1,500+/year typical

As a rough guide, incorporating might become beneficial when your profits consistently exceed £40,000–£50,000 — but the decision depends on many factors including your personal circumstances, dividend income, and future plans.

What Taxes Do Self-Employed People Pay?

As a sole trader, you may pay up to four types of tax:

  1. Income Tax — 20%, 40%, or 45% on taxable profits above the £12,570 Personal Allowance
  2. Class 2 National Insurance — £3.45 per week if profits exceed £12,570
  3. Class 4 National Insurance — 6% on profits between £12,570 and £50,270, plus 2% on profits above £50,270
  4. VAT — Only if your taxable turnover exceeds £90,000 (see our VAT guide)

National Insurance — Rates and Examples

Class Rate When It Applies
Class 2 £3.45/week Profits over £12,570
Class 4 6% Profits between £12,570–£50,270
Class 4 2% Profits over £50,270
Net Profit Class 2 Class 4 Total NI
£20,000 £179 £446 £625
£35,000 £179 £1,346 £1,525
£55,000 £179 £2,356 £2,535

Use our self-employment tax calculator to get a personalised breakdown of your tax bill.

Calculating Your Taxable Profit

Your taxable profit is straightforward to calculate:

Taxable Profit = Total Business Income (Turnover) − Allowable Expenses

Allowable expenses are costs you incur wholly and exclusively for your business. The more legitimate expenses you claim, the less tax you pay. If your expenses are minimal, use the £1,000 Trading Allowance instead.

Allowable Expense Categories

Category Examples
Office costs Stationery, phone, postage
Travel Business journeys (not commuting)
Clothing Uniforms, protective equipment
Staff costs Wages, subcontractors
Stock Items for resale
Financial Accountant, bank charges
Marketing Advertising, website
Professional Subscriptions, insurance
Premises Rent, utilities (business % only)

Working From Home

Method How It Works
Simplified expenses Flat monthly rate — no receipts needed
Proportion of costs Actual % of home used for business

Simplified expenses rates:

Hours Worked at Home per Month Monthly Amount
25–50 hours £10
51–100 hours £18
101+ hours £26

Vehicle Expenses

Option Rate
Simplified mileage 45p/mile for first 10,000 miles; 25p/mile after
Actual costs Proportion of real car expenses

Once you choose a method for a vehicle you must stick with it for that vehicle’s lifetime.

Mileage examples:

Business Miles Calculation Allowable
8,000 8,000 × 45p £3,600
15,000 (10,000 × 45p) + (5,000 × 25p) £5,750

See our allowable expenses guide for a comprehensive list.

Keeping Records

HMRC requires you to keep records of all your business income and expenses. You must retain records for at least five years after the 31 January submission deadline for the relevant tax year.

Records you should keep include:

  • All sales invoices and receipts
  • Bank statements for business accounts
  • Purchase receipts and expense records
  • Mileage logs for business travel
  • Records of any assets bought or sold

Making Tax Digital for Income Tax

From April 2026, self-employed individuals with income over £50,000 will be required to use Making Tax Digital (MTD) for Income Tax. This means:

  • Using HMRC-compatible software to keep digital records
  • Sending quarterly income and expense summaries to HMRC
  • Submitting a final declaration instead of a traditional tax return

Those earning over £30,000 will follow from April 2027. Start using digital bookkeeping software now to prepare — options include FreeAgent, Xero, and QuickBooks.

Filing Your Self Assessment Tax Return

Here’s the step-by-step process:

  1. Gather your records — Compile all income and expense information for the tax year (6 April to 5 April)
  2. Log in to HMRC — Use your Government Gateway account at gov.uk
  3. Complete the SA100 form — Enter your personal details, income sources, and any employment income
  4. Fill in the self-employment supplement (SA103) — Enter your turnover, expenses, and net profit
  5. Declare other income — Savings interest, rental income, dividends, etc.
  6. Claim reliefs and allowances — Pension contributions, charitable donations, Marriage Allowance
  7. Submit and pay — HMRC calculates your bill automatically once you’ve submitted

Deadlines:

  • Paper returns: 31 October
  • Online returns: 31 January
  • Payment: 31 January

Payments on Account

If your Self Assessment bill exceeds £1,000 (and less than 80% of your tax was deducted at source), HMRC requires payments on account — two advance instalments towards your next year’s tax:

  • 31 January — First payment (50% of previous year’s bill)
  • 31 July — Second payment (50% of previous year’s bill)

Any remaining balance is settled on the following 31 January as a balancing payment.

If your income drops

You can apply to reduce your payments on account through your HMRC online account. This is sensible if you know your profits have fallen significantly. However, if you over-reduce and end up owing more, HMRC will charge interest on the underpayment.

Construction Industry Scheme (CIS)

If you work as a subcontractor in the construction industry, the contractor you work for may deduct tax from your payments under the Construction Industry Scheme (CIS). The standard deduction rate is 20% (or 30% if you’re not registered with HMRC for CIS).

These deductions count as advance payments of your income tax — you’ll get credit for them when you file your Self Assessment return. If more was deducted than you owe, you’ll receive a refund.

VAT Considerations

Your turnover (not profit) determines whether you need to register for VAT.

Turnover VAT Required?
Under £90,000 Not required (voluntary registration possible)
£90,000 or above Must register

VAT Schemes

Scheme Best For
Standard VAT Most businesses — invoice-based accounting
Flat Rate Scheme Simpler admin; can be more profitable for service businesses
Cash Accounting Helps cash flow — pay VAT when customer pays you

Voluntarily registering before the threshold can be worthwhile if your clients are VAT-registered and you have significant VAT-able purchases to reclaim.

Pension for Self-Employed

Unlike employees, self-employed people are not automatically enrolled into a workplace pension. You need to take the initiative.

Reality Action Needed
No employer contributions Set up and fund your own pension
Tax relief still applies Government adds 20%+ on top of contributions
Higher/additional rate relief Claim through Self Assessment

Popular low-cost SIPP providers include Vanguard, AJ Bell, and PensionBee. Contributing also reduces your Income Tax bill — a £1,000 SIPP contribution costs a basic rate taxpayer just £800.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Not saving for your tax bill — A good rule is to set aside 25–30% of your profits in a separate savings account throughout the year.
  2. Failing to claim all expenses — Many sole traders miss legitimate deductions. Review our allowable expenses guide to make sure you’re claiming everything you’re entitled to.
  3. Mixing personal and business finances — Open a separate business bank account. It makes bookkeeping easier and creates a clear audit trail.
  4. Ignoring payments on account — Your first January bill can be a shock. Plan ahead by understanding that it may include the previous year’s tax plus the first payment on account.
  5. Not keeping records long enough — Retain records for at least five years after the filing deadline. HMRC can open an enquiry within this window.

Self-Employed Tax Checklist

Getting Started

  • Register with HMRC for Self Assessment
  • Open a separate business bank account
  • Set up record-keeping (spreadsheet or software)
  • Start setting aside 25–30% of profits for tax

Throughout the Year

  • Record all income and expenses regularly
  • Reconcile bank account monthly
  • Transfer tax savings each month
  • Keep receipts (digital scan is fine)

Annual Deadlines

Action Deadline
File paper tax return 31 October
File online tax return 31 January
Pay tax owed 31 January
Second payment on account 31 July

Key Numbers

Figure Value
Personal Allowance £12,570
VAT registration threshold £90,000
Class 4 NI lower limit £12,570
Self Assessment phone 0300 200 3310

Sources

  1. HMRC — Income Tax
  2. HMRC — National Insurance