Making Tax Digital for Income Tax: What You Actually Need to Know Before April 2026
The programme has been delayed five times. This time, the legislation is in place, the beta is live, and the penalty framework is built. Here's what's happening and when.
Quick Reference
| April 2026 | Mandatory for sole traders and landlords with gross income over £50,000 |
| April 2027 | Threshold drops to £30,000 |
| April 2028 | Threshold drops to £20,000 |
| Partnerships | Deferred indefinitely. No confirmed date. |
| Quarterly deadlines | 7 August, 7 November, 7 February, 7 May |
| Final Declaration | 31 January (replacing Self Assessment return) |
| First-year grace | No penalty points for late quarterly updates in 2026/27 |
| Software required | HMRC-recognised MTD-compatible software or API-enabled spreadsheet |
| Penalty threshold | 4 late points = £200 fine, then £200 per further late submission |
The short version
From 6 April 2026, if you're a sole trader or landlord with gross business and property income over £50,000, you must keep digital records and submit quarterly summaries to HMRC using compatible software. This isn't optional. It isn't "coming soon." It's arriving in roughly two months.
The programme has been delayed five times since its original 2018 target date, which has created a very understandable "cry wolf" effect. Every accountant in the country has been told to prepare for this at least three times. But this time, HMRC has been running a public beta since April 2025, the legislation is in place, and the penalty framework is built. The machinery is moving.
Who is affected (and who isn't)
MTD ITSA applies to individuals with qualifying income from self-employment and/or property. The threshold test is based on gross income - turnover, not profit. If your client takes in £55,000 but spends £40,000 on materials, they're still in scope despite only making £15,000.
The qualifying income includes:
- Self-employment income (all trades combined)
- UK property income
- Overseas property income
It does not include employment income, pensions, dividends, savings interest, or investment income. A landlord earning £45,000 in rental income and £80,000 from their PAYE job is not caught at the £50,000 threshold - only the rental income counts.
Phase-in schedule
Threshold Timeline
| 6 April 2026 | Gross qualifying income above £50,000 |
| 6 April 2027 | Gross qualifying income above £30,000 |
| 6 April 2028 | Gross qualifying income above £20,000 |
That final £20,000 threshold was confirmed in the Spring Statement 2025 and is expected to bring roughly one million additional taxpayers into scope - including most landlords with even a single let property.
Who's exempt
Partnerships have been punted into the long grass. HMRC remains "committed" to bringing them in, but no date has been set. For now, partnership income is out of scope entirely.
Automatic exemptions apply to trustees, personal representatives of deceased persons, Lloyd's underwriters (in respect of their underwriting), and anyone without a National Insurance number on 31 January before the tax year starts.
You can also apply for digital exclusion if age, disability, location (poor broadband), or religious beliefs make digital compliance impractical. HMRC will not, however, accept "I prefer paper" or "I find computers stressful" as grounds for exemption. They have 28 days to respond to an application.
What quarterly reporting actually means
Four times a year, you submit a summary of income and expenses to HMRC via compatible software. These are not mini tax returns. No capital allowance calculations, no pension relief claims, no sideways loss relief. Just the numbers.
The data categories mirror the existing Self Assessment supplementary pages - SA103F for self-employment and SA105 for property. In practice, this means reporting totals for categories like: turnover, cost of goods sold, staff costs, travel, premises costs, repairs, professional fees, and other allowable expenses.
Standard quarter dates
You can elect to use calendar quarters instead of tax year quarters, which is tidier and aligns better with VAT quarters. The election must be made before your first update is submitted. Filing deadlines remain the same either way.
Cumulative Reporting
One important quirk: the updates are cumulative. Each submission shows year-to-date figures, not just that quarter's activity. So your Q3 submission contains all income and expenses from 6 April through to 5 January. If you got something wrong in Q1, you can correct it in Q2 without penalty.
Separate submissions per business
A sole trader who also rents out a property will need eight quarterly submissions per year - four for the trade, four for the property. If someone has two trades and a property, that's twelve. This is the bit that catches people off guard.
Final Declaration
After the four quarterly updates, there's a Final Declaration due by 31 January following the tax year. This replaces the old Self Assessment return. It's where you declare other income (employment, dividends, savings), claim reliefs, make adjustments, and confirm everything is correct. The End of Period Statement (EOPS) that was originally planned has been scrapped - its contents were absorbed into the Final Declaration.
The software question
HMRC maintains a list of recognised software providers. There are hundreds of them, ranging from the big players (Xero, QuickBooks, Sage, FreeAgent) to specialist products aimed at landlords or sole traders with simple affairs.
The key requirements:
Digital record-keeping
Every transaction must be recorded digitally - in software or a spreadsheet. Paper ledgers are dead, at least for anyone in scope.
API connection to HMRC
Your software must submit quarterly updates directly to HMRC's systems. If you use spreadsheets, they must connect through API-enabled bridging software. You cannot email a spreadsheet to HMRC.
Digital links
Data must flow digitally from the source transaction all the way to the submission. No retyping numbers from one system to another.
You do not have to scan and store receipts digitally. The underlying evidence can still be paper. But the accounting records themselves must be digital.
For businesses below the VAT threshold, there's a concession: they can use the simplified "three-line accounts" format (income, expenses, profit/loss) rather than the full category breakdown. This helps smaller landlords and micro-businesses.
What this means practically
If your client currently records everything in a desk drawer and hands you a carrier bag of receipts every January, that workflow dies in April 2026. They need to be recording income and expenses digitally, at minimum quarterly, in something that can talk to HMRC.
The silver lining is that the quarterly rhythm forces better record-keeping habits. Bank reconciliation - matching bank transactions against recorded income and expenses - becomes a quarterly discipline rather than an annual panic. That's arguably the single biggest operational change for most small businesses, and the one most likely to surface errors before they compound over twelve months.
How this differs from MTD for VAT
MTD for VAT has been mandatory for all VAT-registered businesses since April 2022, so most accountants and bookkeepers have already lived through one digital transition. MTD ITSA is similar in principle - digital records, compatible software, regular submissions - but differs in several important ways:
MTD for VAT
Threshold: VAT registration (£90,000)
Reporting: Periodic (that quarter only)
Content: Output tax minus input tax
Registration: Automatic via VAT reg
Penalty regime: Points-based (active since 2023)
MTD for Income Tax
Threshold: £50K gross income (dropping to £20K)
Reporting: Cumulative (year-to-date)
Content: Full income & expense breakdown
Registration: Separate sign-up required
Penalty regime: Points-based (first-year grace for 2026/27)
Being signed up for MTD for VAT does not automatically enrol you for MTD ITSA. They're distinct services with separate sign-ups. Many people caught by MTD ITSA will not be VAT-registered at all.
Penalties: the points system
The old HMRC penalty regime - a single fine for a late return - has been replaced by a points-based system. Think of it like a driving licence, except HMRC isn't going to offer you a speed awareness course.
Late submission penalties
Points accumulation
Each missed deadline earns one penalty point. Points accumulate across all submission types (quarterly updates and the Final Declaration).
The threshold: 4 points
When you hit 4 points: £200 penalty. Each further late submission: another £200.
Clearing points
Points expire after 24 months of clean compliance. Once at the threshold, you need to submit everything on time for a set "period of compliance" before points reset.
Late payment penalties
Payment Penalties Are Harsher
These apply to the Final Declaration payment and are significantly steeper than submission penalties:
- Days 1–15 late: No penalty (but interest runs from day 1)
- Days 16–30 late: 3% of the amount outstanding at day 15
- Day 31+: A further 3% of the outstanding amount, plus a daily penalty accruing at 10% per annum until paid
Late payment interest is calculated at the Bank of England base rate plus 2.5%, running from the day after the due date.
The first-year concession
Soft Landing for 2026/27
For taxpayers joining MTD ITSA in April 2026, no penalty points will be charged for the first four quarterly updates in 2026/27. This is a meaningful concession - essentially a year to get your systems working without being penalised for teething problems.
However, this is not a late payment concession. Payment penalties still apply from day one. And the grace period only applies to the 2026/27 cohort - those joining in April 2027 (the £30,000 threshold) will not receive the same soft landing.
Also worth noting: you cannot file your 2026/27 Final Declaration unless all four quarterly updates have been submitted. So "I'll just skip the quarterlies and file everything at the end" is not a viable strategy.
What accountants should be telling their clients right now
If you have clients who are sole traders or landlords with gross income above £50,000, the clock is already ticking. Here's a practical checklist of conversations to have before April 2026:
Identify who is in scope
Run through your client list. Anyone with combined self-employment and property gross income over £50,000 is in the first wave. Don't forget overseas property income counts. Don't forget that the threshold test is on turnover, not profit. Then look at the £30,000 bracket - those clients are only twelve months behind.
Get them on software now, not in March
The worst possible time to migrate a client onto new software is the week before quarterly reporting begins. If they're not already on a digital bookkeeping platform, start that transition immediately. Clients currently using spreadsheets need to understand that their spreadsheet either needs API-enabled bridging software, or they need to move to a proper bookkeeping product. "I have a spreadsheet" is only half the answer.
Discuss the workflow change
Quarterly reporting means quarterly bookkeeping. The old model - ignore everything for eleven months, then reconstruct the year from bank statements and receipts in January - doesn't survive contact with MTD ITSA. Clients need to understand that transactions must be recorded at least quarterly, and realistically more often than that if the quarterly submission is going to be anything other than a scramble.
Set expectations on fees
More frequent reporting means more frequent work, which means fees need to reflect the new reality. Some firms are moving to monthly retainers. Others are restructuring their engagement letters to include quarterly submissions as a distinct service line. Either way, the conversation about pricing needs to happen before the work starts, not after the first invoice arrives.
Consider the pilot
HMRC's public beta has been running since April 2025. Signing up a handful of suitable clients as volunteers gives you a chance to test your software, your workflows, and your assumptions against real HMRC systems. It's infinitely preferable to discovering a problem in August 2026 when the first deadline is bearing down.
Check their threshold annually
Income fluctuates. A landlord at £48,000 in 2025/26 might be at £52,000 in 2026/27. The threshold test applies to the qualifying tax year (broadly, the tax year two years before), so clients near the boundary need monitoring. HMRC will write to taxpayers they believe are in scope, but relying on HMRC to tell you is not a practice management strategy.
Talk about penalties early
Clients respond to concrete consequences. "You'll need to submit quarterly" is abstract. "Miss four deadlines and you'll get a £200 fine, and then £200 for every subsequent late submission, and if you pay late there's a 3% penalty at day 16 plus 10% annualised interest from day 31" - that tends to concentrate the mind.
The bigger picture
MTD ITSA is the most significant change to income tax administration since Self Assessment launched in 1996/97. It transforms the UK's income tax system from an annual reckoning into something closer to real-time reporting.
HMRC's stated objective is to reduce the "tax gap" - the difference between what's owed and what's collected. The theory is straightforward: if people record income and expenses as they go and report quarterly, errors and omissions are caught sooner, tax liabilities are more accurate, and fewer people end up with unexpected bills.
Whether the reality matches the theory depends entirely on execution. The five delays haven't inspired universal confidence. The software ecosystem is still maturing. And the sheer number of small landlords who are about to be swept into quarterly digital reporting at the £20,000 threshold in 2028 is a logistical challenge that nobody has fully grappled with yet.
But the direction is set. The legislation is in force. And for anyone with gross self-employment or property income over £50,000, April 2026 is no longer "sometime in the future." It's next financial year.
The Bottom Line
The practices that will handle this smoothly are the ones already having these conversations with clients, already testing their software, and already building quarterly workflows into their service model. The ones that will struggle are the ones hoping for a sixth delay. HMRC has a long institutional memory, but even they have a limit on patience.
Quarterly reconciliation at scale?
MTD ITSA means reconciling every client's books every quarter, not once a year. If you're managing more than a handful of clients, that's a lot of bank matching.
See how ReconcileIQ handles itFrequently Asked Questions
When does MTD for Income Tax start?
MTD for Income Tax Self Assessment begins in April 2026 for self-employed individuals and landlords with qualifying income above £50,000. Those with income above £30,000 join from April 2027.
What do I need to do to comply with MTD for Income Tax?
You need MTD-compatible software to keep digital records of income and expenses, submit quarterly updates to HMRC, and file an End of Period Statement and Final Declaration annually.
What are the penalties for not complying with MTD ITSA?
Late submission penalties use a points-based system. You receive a point for each late quarterly update. After reaching the threshold (4 points for quarterly obligations), a £200 penalty applies for each subsequent late submission.
Does MTD for Income Tax affect limited companies?
No. MTD for ITSA applies to self-employed individuals and landlords, not limited companies. Corporation Tax digitalisation is being considered separately and has no confirmed start date yet.