MTD April 2026: What Accountants Are Actually Recommending to Sole Trader Clients

Published 9 March 2026 · 10 min read · By Landolio

Making Tax Digital for Income Tax starts on 6 April 2026 for sole traders and landlords earning over £50,000. That's 28 days away.

If you're a sole trader who hasn't sorted MTD yet, you're probably hearing a lot of noise: software companies pushing their products, HMRC sending letters, and conflicting advice about what you actually need to do.

So we looked at what accountants and bookkeepers are actually telling their clients right now — not what software companies want you to hear, but what the professionals who manage this stuff daily are recommending.

Key Dates:

The Professional Consensus: 3 Software Tiers

After reviewing discussions across accounting forums, professional networks, and client-facing advice, a clear consensus has emerged around three tiers:

Tier 1: The Default Recommendation — Xero Simple Start

Price: £7 + VAT/month (£100.80/year)

This is what most accountants are recommending for sole traders who need the simplest possible MTD setup. Xero Simple Start includes:

What accountants say:

"We've generally been recommending the Xero Simple tier as it seems the best balance of price and user-friendliness. This only works for cases where invoicing isn't necessary and we can capture everything from a bank feed."

Best for: Sole traders with straightforward income (one or two income sources), minimal invoicing needs, and who just need to meet the MTD requirement with minimum fuss.

Watch out for: The Simple Start tier doesn't include invoicing. If you need to create and send invoices, you'll need the Standard tier (£22+VAT/month) or use a separate invoicing tool.

Tier 2: The Free Option — FreeAgent (via NatWest/Mettle/RBS)

Price: Free if you bank with NatWest, Mettle, Royal Bank of Scotland, or Ulster Bank. Otherwise £14.50+VAT/month.

FreeAgent is a UK-built accounting platform specifically designed for freelancers and sole traders. If you're with a participating bank, it's completely free — including MTD submissions.

Best for: Sole traders who bank with NatWest/Mettle/RBS (it's free — hard to argue against). Also excellent for those who need invoicing built in.

Watch out for: If you don't qualify for free access, the full price is higher than Xero Simple Start. The interface is more feature-rich, which some find overwhelming compared to simpler tools.

Tier 3: The Budget Option — QuickBooks Simple Start

Price: £6+VAT/month for the first 6 months, then £12+VAT/month (£129.60/year after intro)

QuickBooks is the most recognised name and has a large user base, which means plenty of online help resources and accountant familiarity.

Best for: Sole traders who want a well-known brand with extensive online support resources. The introductory pricing makes it the cheapest option for the first 6 months.

Watch out for: The post-introductory price jump is significant. Many accountants note that clients sign up for the cheap rate and get surprised 6 months later. Read our MTD software real costs guide for a full breakdown of what you'll actually pay annually.

Quick Comparison

SoftwareMonthly CostAnnual CostInvoicingBest For
Xero Simple Start£7+VAT£101/yr❌ Not includedSimplest MTD compliance
FreeAgent (via NatWest)Free£0✅ IncludedNatWest/Mettle customers
FreeAgent (paid)£14.50+VAT£209/yr✅ IncludedUK-focused, full features
QuickBooks Simple£6-12+VAT£87-173/yr✅ BasicCheapest initial cost
HMRC Free SoftwareFree£0❌ Not includedAbsolute minimum spend

What About Spreadsheets + Bridging Software?

A common question: "Can I just keep using my spreadsheet and submit via bridging software?"

Technically yes, but most accountants are actively steering clients away from this approach. Here's why:

Read our full guide to MTD bridging software if you want to understand this option in detail.

The Elephant in the Room: Are Sole Traders Actually Ready?

The professional consensus is: most aren't.

"The freelancer perspective I am hearing is that a lot of people are nowhere near prepared."

Common reasons for the lack of readiness:

The 28-Day Catch-Up Plan

If you haven't started, here's exactly what to do this week:

Week 1 (Now — 15 March): Choose Software and Sign Up

  1. Check if you qualify: Did your self-employment or property income exceed £50,000 in 2024/25? If yes, MTD applies to you from April 6. Use our free MTD Readiness Checker to confirm.
  2. Choose software: Use the comparison above. If you bank with NatWest/Mettle, start with FreeAgent (free). Otherwise, Xero Simple Start (£7+VAT/month) is the path of least resistance.
  3. Sign up for HMRC's MTD service: This is separate from your existing Self-Assessment registration. Go to gov.uk and search "sign up for Making Tax Digital for Income Tax." You'll need your UTR number and National Insurance number.

Week 2 (16-22 March): Connect and Import

  1. Connect your bank feed: Link your business bank account to your chosen software. Most banks support Open Banking connections, so this takes about 5 minutes.
  2. Import historical data: If your software supports it, import this tax year's transactions so you're starting with clean data.
  3. Set up categories: Create expense categories that match HMRC's Self-Assessment categories (travel, office costs, professional subscriptions, etc.).

Week 3 (23-29 March): Catch Up

  1. Categorise existing transactions: Go through the bank feed and categorise everything since April 6, 2025. This is the time-consuming part, but software auto-suggestions make it faster than you'd expect.
  2. Scan/upload any paper receipts: Get them into the system now rather than scrambling later.
  3. Test the quarterly submission: Most software lets you preview what a quarterly update looks like before submitting. Review it to make sure the numbers make sense.

Week 4 (30 March — 5 April): Final Checks

  1. Verify HMRC registration: Log into your HMRC account and confirm you're registered for MTD for Income Tax.
  2. Check software connection to HMRC: Authorise your software to submit to HMRC on your behalf (this is a one-time setup within the software).
  3. Breathe. Your first quarterly update isn't due until July 5. You have time to refine your workflow.
Easter Alert: Remember that April 3-6 are Easter bank holidays. HMRC phone lines and most bank services will be unavailable. If you need to call HMRC about your MTD registration, do it before April 2. Read our Easter tax year end guide for the full impact.

The Penalty Grace Period: What It Actually Means

HMRC has confirmed a "soft landing" period for the first year of MTD (2026/27 tax year). This means:

Think of it as stabilisers on a bike — they keep you from falling, but you still need to pedal. The grace period gives you breathing room to get your workflow right without financial penalties, but you still need to be set up and making submissions.

Read our full guide to the MTD penalty grace period for details.

What If You're Under £50k?

If your self-employment income is under £50,000, MTD doesn't apply to you yet. But:

Even if MTD doesn't legally require you to use software yet, many accountants are recommending that sole traders start now anyway. The transition is easier when it's voluntary, and good digital records make Self-Assessment significantly simpler.

What Accountants Wish Their Clients Knew

Based on conversations across professional networks, here's what accountants want their sole trader clients to understand:

  1. MTD is not optional. It's not a suggestion or a "nice to have." It's a legal requirement with penalties (after the grace period).
  2. The software cost is a business expense. You can claim MTD software costs as an allowable expense on your tax return. The £7-15/month effectively costs less after tax relief.
  3. Quarterly doesn't mean four tax returns. Quarterly updates are simple summaries of income and expenses — nothing like the full Self-Assessment. Most software generates them with one click.
  4. Bank feeds change everything. If you've been dreading keeping records, automatic bank feed import eliminates 80% of the manual work. You categorise transactions, not enter them.
  5. Ask your accountant. If you have one, they should be guiding you through this. If they haven't mentioned MTD, ask them directly.

📋 Get MTD-Ready This Week

Our MTD Readiness Toolkit (£14) includes everything you need to set up for Making Tax Digital:

Plus, check if MTD applies to you with our free MTD Readiness Checker.

Further Reading