UK COMPANY ACCOUNTS FILING

MTD for Income Tax

MicroFiler files quarterly updates and the year-end final declaration on your behalf for £199 setup plus from £25/month

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THE PROCESS

What is MTD for Income Tax?

MTD for Income Tax (Making Tax Digital for Income Tax Self Assessment) is HMRC’s digital reporting system that requires sole traders and landlords above qualifying income thresholds to keep digital records and submit quarterly updates of income and expenses through compatible software. The legal basis is the Income Tax (Digital Requirements) Regulations 2021, with phased mandation under the Finance Act 2017.

The first phase went live on 6 April 2026 for individuals with combined gross income above £50,000 from self-employment and UK property, with two further phases lowering the threshold to £30,000 in 2027 and £20,000 in 2028.

THREE FILINGS PER YEAR

Digital records

every business and rental transaction recorded in HMRC-recognised software, with bank feeds or manual entry replacing paper ledgers and standalone spreadsheets

Quarterly updates

summary submissions of income and expenses sent to HMRC every three months through compatible software

Final declaration

the year-end submission that confirms total income, claims allowances, and replaces the SA100 self assessment tax return

The system applies per income source. Sole traders with one trade and one rental property submit two separate quarterly updates each quarter. Quarterly updates are cumulative — each submission overwrites the previous one with year-to-date figures, not per-quarter figures.

SERVICE SCOPE

Who needs to comply with MTD for Income Tax?

MTD for Income Tax applies to individuals whose qualifying income from self-employment and UK property exceeds the threshold for their phase. The rollout is phased over three tax years, with thresholds dropping from £50,000 to £20,000 between 2026 and 2028.

Sole traders earning above £50,000

Sole traders with gross self-employment income above £50,000 in the 2024/25 tax year were brought into MTD on 6 April 2026. A sole trader with £55,000 turnover and £20,000 of expenses falls within MTD on the £55,000 figure, not the £35,000 net.

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Landlords with property income above £50,000

Landlords with gross UK rental income above £50,000 in 2024/25 are within MTD from April 2026 on the same basis. Joint property owners count only their individual share toward the threshold; a landlord with a 50% interest in a property generating £80,000 rental income contributes £40,000 to the threshold test.

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People with combined self-employment and rental income

Combined gross income from self-employment and UK property is aggregated to determine whether the threshold is met. A landlord earning £35,000 in rental income and £20,000 in sole trader income has a combined qualifying income of £55,000 and falls within MTD from April 2026. The test is the combined figure, not each source individually.

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Who is exempt from MTD for Income Tax?

Five categories of taxpayer fall outside MTD for Income Tax:

  • Individuals with qualifying income below their phase threshold
  • Trustees, executors, and personal representatives in that capacity
  • Taxpayers without a National Insurance number on 31 January of the relevant tax year
  • Non-UK residents whose UK self-employment and property income is below the threshold
  • Individuals granted digital exclusion exemption by HMRC on grounds of age, disability, location, or religion

Partnerships and LLPs are not yet within MTD for Income Tax, though individual partners with qualifying income from sole trading or property in their own right are caught.

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When does MTD for Income Tax apply?

MTD for Income Tax applies in three phases between April 2026 and April 2028, with thresholds dropping each year. Phase 1 is now live. The phase a taxpayer enters depends on the qualifying income reported in the relevant prior tax year.

Phase Start date Income threshold Based on tax year
Phase 1 6 April 2026 (live) Above £50,000 2024/25
Phase 2 6 April 2027 Above £30,000 2025/26
Phase 3 6 April 2028 Above £20,000 2026/27

Once a taxpayer enters MTD, they remain within the regime even if income drops below the threshold in later years. There is no opt-out mechanism.

For the first phase, quarterly update deadlines for the 2026/27 tax year are fixed:

Quarter Period covered Submission deadline
Q1 6 April – 5 July 2026 7 August 2026
Q2 6 July – 5 October 2026 7 November 2026
Q3 6 October 2026 – 5 January 2027 7 February 2027
Q4 6 January – 5 April 2027 7 May 2027
Final declaration Full 2026/27 tax year 31 January 2028

Calendar quarters (1 April – 30 June, etc.) can be elected within the software before the first update is filed. The 7th-of-the-month deadlines remain unchanged under calendar quarter elections.

The 2025/26 self assessment tax return is still filed by 31 January 2027 under the existing system, since 2025/26 ended before MTD mandation.

HOW IT WORKS

How does MTD for Income Tax work?

MTD for Income Tax works as a four-step annual cycle: digital records throughout the year, four quarterly updates, and a year-end final declaration. The structure replaces the single annual SA100 return with five separate filing obligations.

1

Keeping digital records of income and expenses

Digital records replace paper ledgers and standalone spreadsheets. Every business and rental transaction is recorded in HMRC-recognised software, either through bank feeds, manual entry, or import from invoicing systems. Each record must contain the transaction date, amount, and category. In practice, most landlords and sole traders connect their business bank account to MTD software, which auto-categorises transactions for review.

2

Submitting quarterly updates to HMRC

Every three months, a summary of income and expenses for the year-to-date is submitted to HMRC through the software. These are informational reports showing HMRC the running picture of business performance.
Each income source files a separate quarterly update. A sole trader who is also a landlord submits two updates per quarter, one for the trade and one for the rental property.

3

Filing the final declaration by 31 January

After the tax year ends on 5 April, taxpayers complete a final declaration confirming their full-year figures, claiming allowances and reliefs, and finalising the tax position. The deadline is 31 January following the end of the tax year, the same date as the old self assessment return. For 2026/27, the final declaration is due by 31 January 2028.

How do you register for MTD for Income Tax?

Registration for MTD for Income Tax is done through the HMRC online service using your Government Gateway account. HMRC does not auto-enrol taxpayers as registration is the individual’s responsibility, and missing the registration step does not exempt you from the filing obligation.

Step 1: Confirm your qualifying income

Check your 2024/25 self assessment return for combined gross income from self-employment and UK property. If the combined figure exceeds £50,000, MTD applies from 6 April 2026.

Select software from HMRC’s recognised list. Set up your account, connect your business bank feed where available, and confirm the software supports MTD for Income Tax (not only MTD for VAT).

Sign in to your Government Gateway account and complete the MTD for Income Tax sign-up form. You will need your National Insurance number, UTR, and details of your income sources.

If using an accountant, authorise them to file on your behalf through HMRC’s Agent Services Account system. Authorisation is required before the agent can submit updates or the final declaration on your behalf.

Record every business and rental transaction in the software from the start of the relevant tax year. Records cannot be back-built from paper receipts after a quarter ends if they were not maintained digitally during the quarter.

LATE FILING

What are the penalties on not filing MTD for Income Tax?

MTD for Income Tax penalties operate on a points-based system for late submissions, with a £200 financial penalty triggered at four points. A 12-month soft landing applies to Phase 1 taxpayers for the 2026/27 tax year only; late quarterly updates during this period do not generate penalty points.

Points-based system for late quarterly updates

Each late quarterly update adds 1 penalty point to your record. A £200 penalty is triggered once you reach 4 points. Points expire after 24 months of on-time submissions. Each income source generates points separately, but penalty points are counted once per deadline regardless of how many submissions were late on that date.

HMRC has confirmed that no penalty points will be issued for late quarterly updates during the 2026/27 tax year. The soft landing applies to Phase 1 taxpayers only and covers quarterly updates only. Late filing of the final declaration on 31 January 2028 is not covered and remains penalty-eligible.

Late payment penalties remain in force throughout the soft-landing period. Tax payments are still due by 31 January (balancing payment) and 31 July (second payment on account). Interest accrues from the day after the due date at HMRC’s published rate, with a 3% penalty triggered if tax remains unpaid 30 days after the deadline.

TRANSPARENT PRICING

How MicroFiler handles your MTD for Income Tax filing

MicroFiler’s MTD for Income Tax service covers the full annual cycle that includes software setup, four quarterly updates, and the year-end final declaration.

Services Cost
One-off setup £199
Ongoing filing From £25/month

The setup fee covers software selection, HMRC agent authorisation, bank feed configuration, and the initial digital record-keeping framework for your business or properties. 

What’s included each year

  • Bookkeeping review and transaction categorisation each quarter
  • Submission of all four quarterly updates by their HMRC deadlines (7 August, 7 November, 7 February, 7 May)
  • Year-end final declaration filed by 31 January
  • Ongoing support throughout the year, with replies typically within one working day
  • Records of every submission and HMRC confirmation receipt sent to you

The fixed monthly fee replaces the unpredictable hourly billing many traditional accountants use for MTD. There are no extra charges for missed records sent late, additional questions during the quarter, or filing confirmations.

Get MTD-ready with MicroFiler

MTD for Income Tax is now live for the first phase of sole traders and landlords, with quarterly deadlines starting 7 August 2026 and the soft-landing period ending on 5 April 2027. From April 2027, the £30,000 threshold brings hundreds of thousands more taxpayers into scope. MicroFiler files quarterly updates and the final declaration for £199 setup plus from £25/month, covering every step of the annual cycle. The next obligation alongside MTD for many sole traders and landlords is a self assessment tax return for the 2025/26 tax year, due 31 January 2027.

Frequently asked questions

No. Quarterly updates are informational only, they report income and expenses, not tax due. Tax payment dates remain on the existing self assessment timetable: 31 January for balancing payment and the first payment on account, 31 July for the second payment on account.

Yes, with bridging software. A spreadsheet alone is not MTD-compliant, but a spreadsheet connected to HMRC through approved bridging software meets the digital record-keeping requirement. Bridging software typically costs £1–£10 per month.

The Self Assessment tax return is replaced by the MTD final declaration for sources within MTD. Other income such as employment, dividends, savings interest are reported on the final declaration, which acts as the equivalent of the SA100 for MTD taxpayers.

You file a separate update for each business or income source, not each property. All UK rental income is treated as one property business, so a landlord with five properties files one quarterly update covering all five. Furnished holiday lets follow standard property treatment from April 2025 onward.

You remain within MTD. Once a taxpayer enters the regime in any phase, there is no opt-out mechanism for falling below the threshold in later years. Continued filing is required.

Yes. HMRC’s voluntary sign-up has been open since 2024. Voluntary participants do not face quarterly update penalty points during the testing period and gain familiarity with the software before mandation.

No. Limited companies file annual accounts and a CT600 corporation tax return, both of which sit outside MTD for Income Tax. Company accounts and tax filing operate under the existing corporation tax rules.

MTD for Income Tax applies to sole traders and landlords reporting business and rental income to HMRC, whereas MTD for VAT applies to VAT-registered businesses reporting VAT returns. Both regimes require digital records and software-based submissions, but they cover different taxes and have separate registration, deadlines, and penalty regimes.

Most setups complete within 5 to 10 working days from instruction, including software selection, HMRC agent authorisation, and bank feed configuration. Faster turnaround is possible for simpler cases such as landlords with a single property.

Yes. Mid-year switching is straightforward, your previous accountant transfers the existing digital records, we resume from the next quarterly update, and the £199 setup fee is pro-rated to reflect the partial year.

For Phase 1 taxpayers, no penalty point is issued during the 2026/27 soft landing. The update should still be filed as soon as possible, because outstanding quarterly updates must be submitted before the final declaration is accepted.