MTD deadline accelerated
Whilst the Finance Bill 2021 was relatively low key, one announcement might mean a year has been slashed from a crucial Making Tax Digital (MTD) deadline for many unincorporated businesses. What’s the full story?
A major aim of MTD is to bring the payment date for all taxes closer to when business profits are earned. On the face of it, this makes sense. However, the move has numerous implications for smaller businesses, including additional software and compliance costs. However, an announcement in the latest Finance Bill that all unincorporated businesses will be forced to report taxable profits on a tax year basis may mean that some businesses have seen the additional costs associated with MTD unexpectedly accelerated by twelve months.
Currently, the draft regulations for MTD for income tax stipulate that an unincorporated business must adhere to MTD from the first basis period that begins on or after 6 April 2023. This would mean a sole trader or partnership with a year end of 31 March would be mandated into MTD from 1 April 2024, leaving plenty of time to prepare. However, due to the way the Finance Bill is worded, the new rules will automatically create a new basis period from 6 April 2023, which may bring the MTD compliance date forward by almost twelve months!
It remains to be seen whether any additional transitional rules for affected businesses are announced, but in the meantime it is certainly worth getting a grounding with the MTD overview to avoid being caught on the hop.
Related Topics
-
Special payroll deadline for Christmas
If you pay staff early in December because of Christmas it’s important that you enter the information on your payroll submission correctly. What do you need to know to get this right?
-
Paying VAT when cash is tight
Your business has suffered a major cash-flow problem caused by an unexpected bad debt. Your VAT return is due for payment and you do not have enough funds to pay on time. What can you do?
-
How to improve your state pension
If you ask the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) it will tell you that once you’ve paid 35 full years of NI contributions you can’t increase your state pension by paying more. That’s wrong. When can paying NI beyond the 35-year limit benefit you?
This website uses both its own and third-party cookies to analyze our services and navigation on our website in order to improve its contents (analytical purposes: measure visits and sources of web traffic). The legal basis is the consent of the user, except in the case of basic cookies, which are essential to navigate this website.