2.9 million individuals will be affected
The government is pressing ahead with Making Tax Digital (MTD) for Income Tax – and it will affect many sole traders and landlords over the next few years. Here’s what’s changing, when it’s changing, and how to get ready. What is MTD for Income Tax?Under MTD, sole traders and landlords whose “qualifying income” is above a certain level will need to:
In total, about 2.9 million individuals will eventually need to follow the MTD rules. Are You Ready?The requirement to send quarterly updates means that you will need to keep up to date with your bookkeeping. Doing it all after the year-end will no longer be an option. The need to use software will also mean that keeping paper records of your income and expenses will no longer be sufficient. HMRC’s latest figures show that software use is common but not universal:
The government is pressing ahead with Making Tax Digital (MTD) for Income Tax – and it will affect many sole traders and landlords over the next few years. Here’s what’s changing, when it’s changing, and how to get ready. What is MTD for Income Tax?Under MTD, sole traders and landlords whose “qualifying income” is above a certain level will need to:- Keep digital business records.
- Use HMRC-approved software to send quarterly updates.
- Submit an annual final declaration.
| Qualifying Income | When MTD Becomes Mandatory | Number of People Affected |
| Over £50,000 | 6 April 2026 | Around 864,000 |
| £30,000 – £50,000 | 6 April 2027 | Around 1,077,000 |
| £20,000 – £30,000 | 6 April 2028 | Around 975,000 |
- Over £50,000 income: 63% already use commercial software.
- £30,000–£50,000 income: 49% use software.
- £20,000–£30,000 income: 48% use software.
- Check your qualifying income – add up your total gross self-employment and property income for the year.
- Review your record-keeping – paper records won’t be allowed.
- Consider software options – cloud accounting tools make quarterly submissions easier and keep you compliant.
