If you are a self-employed sole trader or landlord earning over £50,000 and you haven’t heard about Making Tax Digital (MTD) for Income Tax 2026, then congratulations — you are blissfully, dangerously unaware of the most significant change to UK tax reporting in a generation, and HMRC is about to knock on your door like a bailiff with a clipboard and a very serious expression.
I am a trader. I sell things. I hustle. I keep receipts in a shoebox that my dog once chewed. And when I first found out about MTD, I reacted the way any reasonable human being would: I looked at the government website, read three sentences, got overwhelmed, made a cup of tea, and came back three weeks later. That strategy, I can now confirm, is absolutely not a compliance plan.
So let’s talk about what MTD for Income Tax actually is, who it affects, what you need to do, and — most importantly — how not to be the person who gets a penalty notice in the post while everyone else has already sorted themselves out. Think of this as the tax guide I wish I’d had: accurate, researched, and written by someone who truly understands the unique pain of finding out you have four quarterly submissions due when you thought you just had one annual return.
Here is the core truth: MTD for Income Tax is not optional for those who qualify, and it kicks in from 6 April 2026. Every year after that, the income threshold drops further, pulling more and more businesses into the system. This is happening. The government is committed. The software vendors are ready. And if you think you’re going to wriggle out of it by simply not knowing about it? That’s cute. That is genuinely adorable. HMRC does not award points for innocence.
2. What Exactly Is Making Tax Digital for Income Tax? (The Bit You Actually Need to Read)
Making Tax Digital for Income Tax Self-Assessment — now officially abbreviated to MTD for IT because even the government got tired of typing it — is a government initiative requiring self-employed individuals and landlords to keep digital records of their income and expenses and submit quarterly updates to HMRC using compatible software.
You read that right. Quarterly. As in, four times a year. As in, every three months. As in, the era of doing your tax return once a year while watching Christmas TV and panicking is, for those in scope, officially over.
According to HMRC’s official guidance, the MTD for IT rollout applies to businesses and landlords with qualifying income over certain thresholds:
From 6 April 2026: Qualifying income over £50,000
From April 2027: Qualifying income over £30,000
From April 2028: Qualifying income over £20,000
The government’s own figures suggest that around 780,000 people will be mandated from April 2026, with a further 970,000 joining from April 2027. In total, this eventually pulls in around 2.9 million individuals, according to Armstrong Watson’s analysis (Armstrong Watson, 2026).
Now here’s the part that genuinely unsettled me when I first read it: only 30% of those affected are currently aware of the reforms. That means 70% of people who will be legally required to submit digital quarterly returns are out here living their best life completely unaware. That is a statistic that should keep accountants up at night. That statistic keeps me up at night, and I’m not even an accountant. I’m just a trader with a now-extremely-chewed shoebox.
The theoretical underpinning of MTD is solid: the tax gap — the difference between what HMRC is owed and what it actually collects — was estimated at £39.8 billion in 2022-23, representing 4.8% of total tax liabilities. HMRC believes roughly 60% of this gap comes from Self-Assessment business taxpayers, including landlords. The idea is that digital record-keeping and more frequent reporting will reduce errors and make it harder to ‘forget’ income. Accidentally or otherwise.
3. Are You Actually In Scope? (A Guide for Those Who Are Still Hoping the Answer Is No)
Let me help you figure out if MTD applies to you, because I know some of you are currently whispering to yourselves, ‘surely this isn’t me,’ with the optimism of someone who has clearly never received a surprise letter from the taxman.
According to the Association of Taxation Technicians (ATT), your qualifying income is calculated as the gross income from self-employment and/or property, before any expenses or allowances are deducted. It does not include employment income, dividends, bank interest, or pensions. So if you earn £45,000 as an employee and £12,000 as a sole trader, your qualifying income for MTD purposes is £12,000 — you’re not in scope for April 2026.
However, if you are a sole trader and a landlord, your qualifying incomes are combined. So a plumber who earns £30,000 from his plumbing business and £25,000 from a rental property has a combined qualifying income of £55,000 and is squarely in the April 2026 cohort. That plumber also has to submit eight quarterly returns per year — four for the business and four for the property. That’s a lot of quarterly moments for one person who just wanted to unblock sinks and collect rent.
I need to pause on that for a second. Eight quarterly submissions. You know what, the government called this ‘Making Tax Digital.’ Some of us are calling it ‘Making Tax Relentless,’ but here we are.
For joint property owners, only your share of rental income counts. So if a property earns £100,000 and is split 30/70 between two partners, Partner 1 has qualifying property income of £30,000 (in scope from 2027) and Partner 2 has £70,000 (in scope from 2026). The National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA) provides detailed guidance on joint ownership and beneficial interest declarations.
There are also annualisation rules for new businesses. If you started a new trade part-way through 2024/25 and earned £10,000 per month, HMRC will annualise that to £120,000 a year and pull you into April 2026 scope — even though your actual return shows only £30,000. This is one of those rules that makes you feel like you’re in a game where someone keeps moving the goalposts and then invoicing you for the pitch.
4. So What Do You Actually Have to Do? The Step-by-Step Reality Check
Alright. You’ve confirmed you’re in scope. You are currently sitting somewhere between ‘mild concern’ and ‘existential dread.’ Good. That’s the correct emotional range. Now let’s talk about what MTD actually requires of you, because it’s not as terrifying as it sounds — provided you start now and don’t leave it until 5 April 2026.
Step 1: Work Out Your Qualifying Income
Pull up your 2024/25 Self-Assessment tax return — or your records for that year — and calculate your gross income from self-employment and/or property. Gross means before expenses. This is the number HMRC will use to determine whether you are mandated from April 2026.
Step 2: Sign Up for MTD
HMRC will not automatically enrol you. You must sign up yourself. The sign-up facility is already open, both for voluntary registrations for 2025/26 and for mandatory registrations ahead of April 2026. You’ll need Government Gateway credentials and an MTD-compatible software already selected before you can complete sign-up. Don’t leave this until April 2026. The Bishop Fleming guidance recommends starting your digital record-keeping arrangements now.
Step 3: Choose Compatible Software
This is probably the most important practical step. You must use HMRC-approved MTD-compatible software — no exceptions, no workarounds, no ‘can I just email a spreadsheet?’ The answer to that last question is no, unless you use bridging software that creates a digital link between your spreadsheet and HMRC’s system. But even then, you’re adding a step.
Well-known compatible providers include Xero, Sage, QuickBooks, FreeAgent, and a growing number of dedicated landlord apps. Xero’s MTD hub explains the submission process clearly. A basic check-and-send digital record system is sufficient for straightforward businesses. If your income is under the VAT registration threshold of £90,000, you can also use the simplified three-line reporting option — just total income, total expenses, and net profit.
Step 4: Start Keeping Digital Records
From 6 April 2026, you must keep digital records of every transaction. You do not have to scan your receipts — the information needs to be digitally recorded, but physical copies can still be kept separately. What this means in practice is that every time money comes in or goes out of your business, you record it digitally, in real time or as close to real time as possible. The shoebox system is officially retired. My dog is devastated.
Step 5: Submit Quarterly Updates
For those entering MTD in April 2026, your first quarterly update will cover 6 April 2026 to 5 July 2026 and must be submitted to HMRC by 7 August 2026. Subsequent quarterly deadlines follow a similar pattern throughout the year.
The good news — and there is good news, don’t panic — is that quarterly updates are cumulative. If you miss an expense in Q1, you correct it in Q2. You’re not refiling, you’re just updating. Also, no tax adjustments are required at the quarterly stage. You don’t need to figure out whether every expense is allowable right then. You just report income and expenses as they stand. The tax adjustments happen at year-end.
Step 6: Submit Your Final Declaration
After your fourth quarterly update, you submit a Final Declaration — this replaces your Self-Assessment tax return. It will be pre-populated with data from your quarterly submissions, and you add any other income sources (employment, dividends, etc.) and claim reliefs and allowances. The deadline remains 31 January, and the payment dates don’t change.
The big, slightly sneaky footnote here: the Final Declaration must be filed through your MTD software. You cannot do it through HMRC’s online filing service. So if your accountant submits on your behalf, they’ll need MTD-compatible practice software too.
5. Penalties, Points, and Why Ignoring This Is a Really Bad Idea
Let’s talk about consequences, because apparently some of us don’t take action until there’s a number attached to what happens if we don’t.
HMRC is introducing a points-based penalty system for MTD for Income Tax. Miss a quarterly submission? You get a penalty point. Accumulate enough points and you get a financial penalty. The current Self-Assessment flat £100 late filing penalty will still apply to the Final Declaration.
There is, however, a soft landing for the first cohort. According to the ICAEW’s TAXguide 01/25, taxpayers joining MTD in April 2026 will not receive penalty points for late submission of their first four quarterly updates. This grace period is intended to allow businesses to get used to the new system. However, and this is crucial: the soft landing does not apply to those mandated from April 2027 or 2028. And it definitely does not apply to the Final Declaration. Miss the 31 January 2028 deadline for your 2026/27 tax return and you will receive the penalty point with the full weight of HMRC’s disapproval behind it.
I want to be very clear about what ‘soft landing’ means and doesn’t mean. It means HMRC will be gentle about the very first round of quarterly submissions. It does not mean you can show up on 6 April 2026 with no software, no digital records, no plan, and a shoebox. That is not soft landing territory. That is crash landing territory. That is the tax equivalent of forgetting the parachute and hoping there are lots of leaves at the bottom.
6. The Evidence: Why Digital Tax Reporting Is Actually the Right Direction (Even If the Timing Is Stressful)
Look, I know I’ve been making jokes. But let’s be serious for a moment, because the research backing this shift is genuinely compelling.
A peer-reviewed systematic literature review published in Digital Government: Research and Practice (Hesami, Jenkins & Jenkins, 2024) examined the impact of electronic invoicing and pre-filled tax returns on compliance across multiple jurisdictions. The findings confirm that digital reporting mechanisms consistently reduce errors, improve taxpayer identification, and increase overall compliance rates. The researchers found that real-time data sharing substantially reduces the administrative burden on both taxpayers and tax authorities over the medium term.
Another peer-reviewed study published in the Journal of Economic Behavior & Organisation (ScienceDirect, 2025) examined digital technology adoption across firms from 2013 to 2023. The empirical findings indicate that digital tools enhance compliance by reducing information asymmetry between businesses and tax authorities, increasing productivity, and strengthening internal governance. The paper concludes that digital transformation acts as a dual catalyst for operational efficiency and regulatory compliance.
The OECD’s Tax Administration 2025 report further underscores this direction of travel, noting that the automation of income classification using natural language processing improved accuracy by 60% in Thailand’s tax administration pilot. This is not fringe experimentation — this is the mainstream direction of global tax administration.
An IMF Working Paper (2025) on leveraging digital technologies to boost tax collection found a strong association between the digitisation of revenue administration and increased tax revenues, while noting the importance of complementary investments in digital infrastructure and taxpayer education. The paper specifically highlights e-filing as a driver of improved domestic tax collection.
And a preprint paper on Enhancing Taxpayer Performance through Digital Accounting and Real-Time Reporting (ResearchGate, 2025) concludes that real-time digital accounting not only strengthens compliance and accountability but enhances taxpayers’ operational efficiency and trust in fiscal governance. In other words: the data says this works.
Now, does that make it painless for small businesses? No. Does it mean the transition costs are zero? Absolutely not. HMRC’s own impact note acknowledges transitional costs including familiarisation time, possible hardware upgrades, and software subscription costs. The consolation — and it is a genuine one — is that transitional costs can be offset against business profits for tax purposes. So you can at least deduct the cost of the software that you’re now legally required to buy. That’s basically the government’s way of saying sorry. In tax form.
7. Real Stories from the Front Line: Case Studies in MTD Readiness (and Unreadiness)
Case Study 1: The Landlord Who Was Almost Ready
Let’s call her Sandra. Sandra owns two rental properties in Bradford and earns £65,000 gross from them. She’s been filing Self-Assessment returns annually since 2009 and has always been broadly on time. When Sandra’s accountant called her in January 2026 to discuss MTD, she said — and I am paraphrasing — ‘I’ve got a spreadsheet.’
Now, here’s the thing about spreadsheets: they are not automatically MTD-compliant. A spreadsheet can be used, but only if it is connected to HMRC via bridging software. Sandra’s spreadsheet was not connected to anything except her laptop and her anxiety. Her accountant set her up with a dedicated landlord app, migrated her records, and registered her for MTD before April 2026. Sandra now submits four quarterly updates per year and admits that ‘it’s actually fine.’ Her accountant reports that Sandra’s records have dramatically improved and that her year-end Final Declaration now takes a fraction of the time her old annual return required. Sandra still keeps a spreadsheet. Old habits. But at least it’s for her own reference rather than her compliance strategy.
Case Study 2: The Sole Trader Who Did Not See It Coming
Marcus is a freelance graphic designer based in Leeds. He earns approximately £55,000 per year from multiple clients. Marcus was aware of Making Tax Digital for VAT because he crossed the VAT threshold in 2021. He was not aware that MTD for Income Tax was a separate, additional thing. He found out in March 2026 — approximately three weeks before the April start date — when a colleague mentioned it in a WhatsApp group.
Marcus’ situation is the digital equivalent of realising your passport has expired the night before your holiday. You can fix it, but it’s going to cost you in stress, time, and expedited processing fees. Marcus signed up for FreeAgent, which he later described as ‘actually quite good once I got over the shock,’ connected his bank feed, and began digital record-keeping on 6 April. He qualified for the soft landing on quarterly penalties and submitted his first update by the 7 August deadline. He is compliant. He is also considerably more aware of HMRC announcements than he used to be.
The moral of Marcus’s story: WhatsApp groups are sometimes genuinely useful for professional development.
Case Study 3: The Landlord-Trader Hybrid
Then there’s Tony. Tony runs a small landscaping business (sole trader income: £38,000) and owns a rental flat (gross rental income: £18,000). Combined qualifying income: £56,000. In scope from April 2026.
Tony’s challenge was not willingness — Tony was willing — but the fact that he needed two separate sets of digital records and would be submitting eight quarterly updates per year: four for the landscaping business and four for the property. Tony’s accountant walked him through this, set him up with QuickBooks for the landscaping side and a property-specific app for the rental, and explained the digital links required.
Tony now describes himself as ‘a man with two apps and no more excuses.’ His accountant reports that having quarterly data from both income streams has actually improved Tony’s cashflow planning and allowed them to do more proactive tax planning throughout the year, rather than the mad scramble of January. Tony also notes that his accounts are, for the first time in a decade, genuinely up to date.
Case Study 4: The Exemption That Actually Worked
Not everyone needs to comply. Carol is a 74-year-old landlord with a modest rental income. She has no smartphone, no broadband at home, and limited digital literacy. She applied to HMRC for a digital exclusion exemption, arguing that it was not reasonably practicable for her to keep digital records or use electronic communications given her circumstances. Her application was accepted.
Carol continues to file paper returns. The NRLA guidance on exemptions confirms that HMRC does consider genuine digital exclusion cases, including on grounds of age, disability, or location. If you or someone you know genuinely cannot use digital tools, there is a formal process to apply for exemption. It is not automatic — you must apply — but it exists.
8. Choosing Your MTD Software: A Trader’s Honest Assessment
This is where I put my trader hat back on and give you the real talk about software, because the market is growing fast and not all products are equal.
HMRC maintains an approved software list at gov.uk/guidance/find-software-thats-compatible-with-making-tax-digital-for-income-tax. The major players you’ll recognise are Xero, Sage, QuickBooks, and FreeAgent. All four offer bank feeds, automated categorisation, quarterly submission functionality, and integration with accountants. They vary in price (typically £10–50/month), interface design, and how well they handle landlord-specific scenarios.
Free and low-cost options exist, particularly for those using the simplified three-line reporting method. If your business is genuinely straightforward — income in, expenses out, no complexity — you may not need enterprise-level software. There are dedicated landlord apps specifically built for MTD that are cheaper than general accounting platforms and more intuitive for property income tracking.
Bridging software is an option if you are attached to your spreadsheet and refuse to let go. I understand. I had feelings about my shoebox too. Bridging software creates a digital link between your spreadsheet data and HMRC’s API, allowing you to technically comply without moving entirely to a cloud-based system. It works. It is, however, clunkier than a native app and adds an extra step to every submission. If you’re going to be doing this for the next several years — and you are — investing in proper software upfront is almost certainly worth it.
One thing to check: whether your accountant’s software is MTD-compatible. As Bishop Fleming notes (Bishop Fleming, 2025), some accounting practices offer to make MTD submissions on their clients’ behalf using their own practice software. If you want your accountant to handle this for you — entirely reasonable, I would argue — ask them explicitly whether they have MTD-compliant systems in place and what they charge for the additional quarterly submission work.
9. MTD Myths, Misconceptions, and Moments of Pure Wishful Thinking
Myth 1: “My income dropped below £50,000 this year, so I don’t need to worry.”
The threshold is assessed on your 2024/25 income for the April 2026 mandate. If you earned over £50,000 in 2024/25, you are in scope from April 2026 regardless of what happens to your income in 2025/26. You can only exit MTD once your income falls below the threshold for three successive years — and even then, HMRC must confirm it. You cannot just quietly leave. There is no back door.
Myth 2: “It’s a lot of extra admin.”
This one is partially true for the transition period, and entirely false in the steady state. Yes, switching from annual to quarterly submissions requires effort upfront. But once your bank feed is connected and your categories are set up, a quarterly update is literally a review-and-submit process. The software does the heavy lifting. The Independent Landlord blog notes that the government website describes the quarterly update as ‘a simple check and send of a report generated by their software’ for those keeping accurate and up-to-date digital records. The key phrase being: accurate and up-to-date.
Myth 3: “HMRC will remind me when to sign up.”
They might. They might not. HMRC says you may receive a letter — not will. Do not sit around waiting for a government letter to prompt your compliance. Sign up proactively. Your 2024/25 Self-Assessment return is your guide: if that return shows qualifying income over £50,000, you need to be registered and using MTD software from 6 April 2026. Full stop.
Myth 4: “This will change my payment dates.”
It absolutely will not. Tax payment dates remain unchanged: 31 January for balancing payment and first payment on account, 31 July for second payment on account. MTD changes how you report, not when you pay. Though having accurate quarterly data may well change how prepared you are for those payment dates — in a good way.
Myth 5: “Partnership businesses are included from April 2026.”
Not yet. The government has confirmed its commitment to extending MTD to partnerships, but they are not included in the April 2026 or April 2027 phases. If you run a business as a partnership, you’re watching this from the sidelines for now — but do keep watching, because that is not a permanent position.
10. Your MTD Action Plan: What to Do in the Next 30 Days
Let me give you something actionable, because an article about compliance that doesn’t end with a concrete plan is just an anxiety generator with footnotes.
Week 1: Check Your Income — Pull up your 2024/25 records. Calculate your qualifying gross income from self-employment and/or property. If it exceeds £50,000, proceed to Week 2 immediately.
Week 1: Check Your Exemptions — Are you digitally excluded? Are you a trustee, or do you have foreign income complexities (SA109 pages) or averaging adjustments? Check the full exemption guidance on HMRC’s website. If you genuinely qualify for an exemption, apply now.
Week 2: Select Your Software — Research compatible options. Think about whether you want a standalone app, a full accounting platform, or to use your accountant’s system. Get a free trial. Connect your bank feed. See how it feels.
Week 2: Talk to Your Accountant — If you use one, call them. Ask whether they have MTD-compatible software. Ask what additional charges will apply for quarterly submission assistance. If you don’t currently use an accountant, this might be a good moment to get one — the transition period is genuinely simpler with professional guidance.
Week 3: Register for MTD — Sign up through your Government Gateway account. You’ll need your UTR number, your compatible software already selected, and your National Insurance number. The sign-up process is currently open for voluntary registration (2025/26) and for mandatory registration ahead of April 2026.
Week 3: Start Digital Records — Don’t wait until 6 April 2026 to begin digital record-keeping. Start now. The more familiar you are with the software before the mandate kicks in, the smoother your first quarterly submission will be.
Week 4: Understand Your Quarterly Deadlines — Your four submission deadlines for 2026/27 will be approximately 7 August, 7 November, 7 February, and 7 May. Set calendar reminders now. Make them recurring.
11. The Bottom Line: Are You MTD-Ready? (Be Honest.)
We’ve covered a lot of ground. We’ve talked about who’s in scope, what the requirements are, when the deadlines fall, what the penalties look like, what the research says, what the myths are, and what case studies teach us about how real businesses are navigating this shift.
Here is the unvarnished truth from your friendly neighbourhood trader who has now fully upgraded from a chewed shoebox to a cloud-based accounting platform with a bank feed:
MTD for Income Tax is not optional. It is not going away. It is not only for big businesses. It is coming for sole traders and landlords with qualifying income over £50,000 from 6 April 2026, and for everyone earning over £20,000 by April 2028. That is most of us, eventually. The time to act is now — not when the first penalty notice arrives, not when your accountant panics, not at 11:57pm on 5 April 2026.
The businesses and landlords who thrive under MTD will be those who treat this not as a compliance burden but as a genuine opportunity: better financial visibility, more proactive tax planning, fewer year-end surprises, and records that are actually current rather than reconstructed from bank statements and creative memory.
The ones who struggle will be those who wait, who assume someone else will sort it, who believe that not knowing about a legal requirement exempts them from it. I promise you: HMRC has not agreed to those terms.
So. Are you MTD-ready?
If your answer is ‘not yet’ — good. That is honest. You have time. Use it.
If your answer is ‘what is MTD?’ — you’ve just read 5,000 words about it, so you no longer have that excuse.
And if your answer is ‘yes, I’m sorted’ — check your software is actually registered, your bank feed is connected, and your first quarterly deadline is in the diary. Because being ‘nearly sorted’ and being ‘actually compliant’ are two very different places, and only one of them comes with penalty points.
Go be ready. Your future self, your accountant, and your bank balance will thank you.
References
Academic & Research Sources
1. Hesami, S., Jenkins, H.P. & Jenkins, G.P. (2024). Digital Transformation of Tax Administration and Compliance: A Systematic Literature Review on E-Invoicing and Prefilled Returns. Digital Government: Research and Practice. https://dl.acm.org/doi/full/10.1145/3643687
2. ScienceDirect (2025). How does digital technology application affect tax compliance? Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1544612325011900
3. OECD (2025). Tax Administration 2025: Compliance Management. OECD Tax Administration Series. https://www.oecd.org/en/publications/tax-administration-2025_cc015ce8-en/full-report/compliance-management_988ac964.html
4. IMF (2025). Leveraging Digital Technologies in Boosting Tax Collection. IMF Working Paper WP/25/89. https://www.imf.org/-/media/Files/Publications/WP/2025/English/wpiea2025089-print-pdf.ashx
5. ResearchGate (2025). Enhancing Taxpayer Performance through Digital Accounting and Real-Time Reporting. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/396803926_Enhancing_Taxpayer_Performance_through_Digital_Accounting_and_Real-Time_Reporting
Government & Professional Body Sources
6. HMRC / GOV.UK (2025). Making Tax Digital for Income Tax Self-Assessment for sole traders and landlords. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/extension-of-making-tax-digital-for-income-tax-self-assessment-to-sole-traders-and-landlords/making-tax-digital-for-income-tax-self-assessment-for-sole-traders-and-landlords
7. ICAEW Tax Faculty (2025). TAXguide 01/25: MTD Income Tax. https://www.icaew.com/technical/tax/tax-faculty/taxguides/2025/taxguide-01-25
8. Association of Taxation Technicians (ATT) (2025). Making Tax Digital — Frequently Asked Questions. https://www.att.org.uk/making-tax-digital-frequently-asked-questions
9. National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA) (2025). Making Tax Digital for Landlords: Your Essential Guide. https://www.nrla.org.uk/resources/tax/making-tax-digital
10. Armstrong Watson (2026). Making Tax Digital changes for the self-employed and landlords. https://www.armstrongwatson.co.uk/news/2026/01/making-tax-digital-changes-self-employed-and-landlords
11. Bishop Fleming (2025). Making Tax Digital: what should landlords and sole traders know? https://www.bishopfleming.co.uk/insights/making-tax-digital-what-should-landlords-and-sole-traders-know
12. Bishop Fleming (2025). Making Tax Digital to change how landlords and sole traders record their income. https://www.bishopfleming.co.uk/insights/making-tax-digital-change-how-landlords-and-sole-traders-record-their-income
13. The Independent Landlord (2026). Making Tax Digital (MTD) for landlords in 2026. https://theindependentlandlord.com/mtd-landlords/
14. Xero UK (2025). Making Tax Digital for Income Tax: The plan for 2026. https://www.xero.com/uk/programme/making-tax-digital/income-tax/
15. Ross Martin Tax (2025). Making Tax Digital: Survival Guide. https://www.rossmartin.co.uk/making-tax-digital/2536-what-making-tax-digital-means-for-you
Disclaimer:This article is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or accounting advice. Consult a qualified accountant or financial advisor for guidance specific to your business.
Further Reading:

Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.