Taxation: Electronic Government

(asked on 16th September 2025) - View Source

Question to the HM Treasury:

To ask His Majesty's Government when they plan to publish detailed guidance about the interpretation of digital exclusion in the context of Making Tax Digital.


Answered by
Lord Livermore Portrait
Lord Livermore
Financial Secretary (HM Treasury)
This question was answered on 26th September 2025

A significant majority of self-employed individuals and landlords have turnover below the VAT threshold, which is currently £90,000. Since 2022, all VAT-registered businesses have been required to use Making Tax Digital (MTD) regardless of whether they are above of below the VAT threshold. The MTD for Income Tax threshold starts at £50,000 from April 2026, reducing to £30,000 in April 2027 and £20,000 in April 2028. This ensures MTD will extend the benefits of digitalisation to many more businesses, helping them to adopt new digital ways of working, improve productivity and growth and get their tax right. This helps address the tax gap for Income Tax Self-Assessment, which is estimated at £8.7bn in 2023-24 and is particularly prevalent amongst the smallest businesses. HMRC has worked extensively with customers, representative bodies and software developers to ensure that MTD works well for businesses of all sizes.

MTD Quarterly updates are not self-assessment tax returns. They are simple summaries of income and expenditure which can be automatically populated through digital records kept by MTD users. HMRC expects quarterly updates to be accurate based on the best available information at the time, but taxpayers do not have to make a declaration of accuracy when these are submitted, and there will not be penalties for inaccurate quarterly updates.

The Government recognises that not everyone is able to interact with HMRC digitally. Taxpayers who are digitally excluded from MTD for Income Tax will be able to apply for an exemption. HMRC will begin operating the exemption process in the coming weeks.

HMRC will publish detailed guidance when the exemption application process opens for digitally excluded taxpayers. This will explain how taxpayers, or someone acting on their behalf, can apply to be exempted from MTD for Income Tax. HMRC will also write to taxpayers to make them aware of the exemptions. There will also be engagement with business and taxpayer representatives to help disseminate this information.

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