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Everything you need to know about Making Tax Digital
Recently, the UK government have introduced new regulations around how tax records are to be kept and submitted. The rules, known as Making Tax Digital, are designed to digitise the tax system and make online accounting simpler and more accurate. It therefore asks businesses to make potentially costly considerations to ensure their infrastructure is up to standard.
Below, we will examine everything there is to know about Making Tax Digital – what it aims to do, who is affected, its requirements, and how you can comply.
What is Making Tax Digital?
Making Tax Digital is a piece of legislation that’s part of the government’s wider Tax Administration Strategy taking place between 2020-30. Its aims are to:
- Use software to allow customers to integrate tax management with different business processes.
- Make it easier for both businesses and individuals to get their tax right.
- Encourage the digitisation of UK businesses so they can experience productivity gains.
The hope is that the use of digital records and dedicated software will make tax returns more accurate. Submitting tax updates directly to HMRC should also add to overall efficiency. Under Making Tax Digital, businesses will send tax information to HMRC at least four times a year instead of once. This makes it more likely that tax submissions reflect a business’s position in real-time.
As experienced accountants, we know just how important precise bookkeeping is for business success.
Who needs to sign up?
All UK businesses were automatically signed up for Making Tax Digital for VAT from April 2022, regardless of their turnover. Previously, the government stated that only companies that turned over more than £85,000 per year would have to comply. This development means any new businesses will immediately be beholden to making tax digital rules.
The requirements of Making Tax Digital can also apply to landlords and self-employed business owners. However, this is only necessary from 6th April 2026 for those with a yearly business/property income of more than £50,000. Or, if this annual value exceeds £30,000 by 2027.
Landlords and self-employed individuals such as sole traders have the option of signing up voluntarily, although only if you meet the following criteria:
- You’re a UK resident.
- You can prove your returns and payments are up to date.
- You’re registered for Self Assessment.
- Your rentable properties are based in the UK.
Requirements of Making Tax Digital for businesses
Businesses signed up to Making Tax Digital are required to implement a number of measures to make the switch to digital tax. Chief among these is the need to keep digital records which cover:
- The tax point (time of supply)
- The net value of the supply excluding any VAT.
- Business information, including the owner’s full name, the business’s name and address, and how many employees it has.
- The rate of VAT being charged.
- Your VAT registration number, along with details of any VAT accounting schemes used.
These records must be generated and returns submitted from VAT periods started on or after 1st April 2019.
The other requirement is that your business uses software that is compatible with HMRC’s systems. This allows VAT records and returns to be sent quickly via digital means such as email. Compatible software includes a wide range of products, notably Xero. You can check you have the right software on the government website.
Complying with Making Tax Digital
Since April 2022, Making Tax Digital has been a legal requirement for VAT registered businesses. As such, you must follow the rules if you exceed the £85,000 threshold. There is the possibility that penalties will be issued to businesses that fail to keep digital tax records or submit returns using incompatible software.
If you’re faced with changing your internal operations to accommodate Making Tax Digital, perhaps because you’ve grown to the size where you have to register for VAT, the first step is to make a plan. This is because transferring physical accounts to digital can be complicated and time consuming.
If you already keep records in a digital storage space, you must still submit the information using Making Tax Digital compatible software. The requirements for this software are:
- It can prepare VAT returns using digital records.
- It can store and maintain specified digital records.
- It is able to communicate directly with HMRC via a digital link.
Notably, businesses that use spreadsheets to make VAT submission calculations can keep this approach. This is made possible through the bridging feature, which allows for the VAT spreadsheet to simply be uploaded onto a device and submitted from there.
Registering for Making tax Digital
As mentioned previously, you will need to instruct HMRC to sign your business up to Making Tax Digital. They will then move you VAT account from the old HMRC system over to the new one associated with Making Tax Digital. This can be done through the government website by submitting:
- Your business email address.
- VAT registration number.
- A copy of you latest VAT return.
- Your government gateway user ID and password (if you have them). These can be created during the process if needed.
Many people who submit self-assessment tax returns are choosing to sign up for Making Tax Digital for Income Tax ahead of the 2026 deadline. This is simply because it helps them be prepared and to avoid getting caught out. A chartered accountants can take care of the compliance and registration process if you’re operating as an individual.
Experienced business accountants Liverpool
As chartered accountants based in Birkenhead, we’ve helped make accounting stress free for a huge range of local businesses in Liverpool and across Merseyside. Switching over to Making Tax Digital, although sometimes difficult to implement, helps you become more efficient and grow faster. As such, if you’re looking for accountants for small business, you really shouldn’t look any further. Our team is familiar with a range of business taxation, from corporation tax to VAT and PAYE. Contact us today.
What happens during a tax investigation?
As a business, facing a HMRC tax enquiry or investigation can seem daunting. In addition to the stress of the investigation itself, you are then required to execute the day to day running of your business as though everything is normal. HMRC simply wants to crack down on individuals and organisations that are paying less tax than they should be. Nevertheless, you can be the subject of an investigation even if you have nothing to hide.
In this blog, we’ll guide you through everything that happens during a tax investigation.
Types of tax investigation
There are two types of tax investigation that can be carried out by HMRC, each with differing levels of severity. These are:
Aspect enquiry
An investigation targeted at a specific area of the business’s accounts. For example, when there are inconsistencies in a section of a recent tax return.
Full enquiry
Here, a HMRC investigator will review all your business records. If you are a limited company, this will result in scrutiny of company directors’ tax affairs, along with the affairs the business itself. A full-scale investigation is typically initiated when HMRC believes there is significant risk of a tax error.
It should be noted that both an aspect enquiry and a full enquiry can be initiated randomly. As the name suggests, in this case the investigation can affect any business at any time. Oftentimes, HMRC will not consider the nature of your accounts or if the business has triggered an alert before launching a random enquiry.
What can trigger a tax investigation?
While some checks are completely random, there can be a variety of legitimate reasons why HMRC would want to conduct a tax investigation. This includes:
- Late filing of a tax return or tax payment.
- Errors need to be corrected on a tax return.
- The business is reporting expenses that are abnormally high for its industry.
- HMRC has received a tip-off.
- Tax returns are inconsistent.
- The business is operating in a high-risk industry.
Although many believe that tax investigations are exclusively concerned with business income tax. In reality, many different types of taxes can be the subject of an investigation, such as:
- Capital gains tax
- Insurance premium tax
- Landfill tax
- Climate change levy
- Corporation tax
- VAT
- Construction industry scheme
Process of a HMRC tax investigation
As the national tax authority in the UK, HMRC has the right to check a business’s affair at any time. If your business is selected for a tax investigation, the first thing that will happen is you’ll receive an official communication from HMRC. This will be either a letter or a phone call to confirm the existence of the investigation, as well as what their focus is.
During the course of the tax investigation, HMRC will then ask various questions to find out what they need to know. An investigator can go back up to 20 years in business records during a full enquiry. This is reduced to 6 years when carelessness in a certain area is suspected, and 4 years for random enquiries. Their actions will be tailored to the areas the investigation is targeting, which can include:
- The company tax return.
- Your Self Assessment tax return (if present).
- Any PAYE records and returns.
- Tax accounts and tax calculations.
HMRC investigators can visit business premises to inspect assets, view computers, question staff, and remove records for examination. Depending on the severity of the investigation, the entire process can take anywhere from 3-6 months for a random check, to 18 months for a full tax investigation.
If you use an accounting service for statutory accounts or management accounts, HMRC could make first contact with this party instead. If this is the case, your accountant should inform you of the investigation immediately.
Outcomes
Once HMRC are satisfied they’ve found what they need, the end of the investigation will be marked by a decision notice or the agreement of a contract settlement. The former outlines HMRC’s final assessment and will include any penalties. Decision notices are typically issued in the form of a letter.
On the other hand, a contract settlement is a legal agreement between the taxpayer and HMRC. In it, you must agree to pay any tax owed along with any penalties set out. As part of the contract, HMRC agrees not to forcibly recover the money by using its powers.
Get tax investigation insurance
The best way to protect your business against a tax investigation is to make sure your accounts are in order. For this, you need expert bookkeeping and accounting services such as those provided by Jan McDermott. Being investigated by HMRC can be a time-consuming and costly process. We offer tax investigation insurance as a solution, so you’re protected from any costs incurred during a HMRC investigation. Contact us today to get started.