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MTD Digital Records: Exactly What You Need to Keep from April 2026

Updated: 13 March 2026 · For sole traders and self-employed earning over £50,000

From 6 April 2026, Making Tax Digital for Income Tax requires you to keep digital records and submit quarterly updates to HMRC. But what exactly counts as a "digital record"? What do you actually need to record? And what happens if you get it wrong?

This guide gives you the practical answer — no jargon, no waffle.

⏰ Does this apply to you? MTD for Income Tax applies from April 2026 if your self-employment or property income exceeded £50,000 in any of the last 3 tax years. From April 2027, the threshold drops to £30,000. Check your MTD readiness →

What "digital records" actually means

Under MTD, "digital" means your records must be stored in software that can connect to HMRC's systems via API. This is the key distinction — it's not enough to type things into a Word document or a basic spreadsheet.

Your records must be:

The records you must keep

🔴 Mandatory records for every transaction:
🔴 Additional mandatory records for income:
🔴 Additional mandatory records for expenses:

HMRC's expense categories

Your software needs to categorise expenses into HMRC's standard groups:

CategoryExamples
Cost of goods soldMaterials, stock, subcontractor costs
Construction industry costsCIS subcontractor payments
Staff costsSalaries, wages, employer NIC, pensions
Premises costsRent, rates, utilities, insurance, use of home
Repairs and maintenanceEquipment repairs, property maintenance
Administrative costsPhone, internet, software, postage, stationery
Advertising and marketingWebsite, ads, business cards, sponsorship
Interest and bank chargesBusiness loan interest, bank fees, card charges
Travel costsMileage, public transport, parking, accommodation
Legal and professionalAccountant, solicitor, professional memberships
Other expensesAnything not covered above

What software is acceptable?

✅ Acceptable for MTD:
❌ NOT acceptable on their own:

The spreadsheet question

Yes, you can continue using a spreadsheet — but only if it's connected to MTD-compatible bridging software. Here's how it works:

How spreadsheet + bridging works:
  1. You record transactions in your spreadsheet (date, amount, category, customer/supplier)
  2. Bridging software reads your spreadsheet data
  3. The bridging software submits your quarterly update to HMRC via API

Popular bridging options include BTCSoftware, 123 Sheets, and Tax Filer. Costs typically £5-15/month.

For most people, using proper accounting software is simpler than maintaining a spreadsheet + bridging setup. But if you're comfortable with spreadsheets and don't want to change, bridging is a valid option.

Read our spreadsheet vs software comparison →

Quarterly updates — what you submit

Every quarter, you'll submit a summary of your income and expenses to HMRC. The deadlines are:

QuarterPeriodSubmission deadline
Q16 April – 5 July5 August
Q26 July – 5 October5 November
Q36 October – 5 January5 February
Q46 January – 5 April5 May

After the 4th quarter, you'll also submit an End of Period Statement (EOPS) and a Final Declaration (replacing the annual tax return) by 31 January.

💡 The quarterly updates are NOT tax returns. They're summaries of your income and expenses. HMRC uses them to estimate your tax position throughout the year. Your actual tax liability is only finalised in the Final Declaration.

How long to keep records

Keep all digital records for at least 5 years after the 31 January submission deadline for the relevant tax year.

Tax yearKeep records until at least
2026/2731 January 2033
2027/2831 January 2034
2028/2931 January 2035

Do you still need paper receipts?

HMRC doesn't require paper receipts if you have adequate digital records. However:

Common mistakes to avoid

Penalties for poor record-keeping

HMRC can charge up to £3,000 for failure to keep adequate records. In practice:

Getting started — practical steps

  1. Choose your softwarecompare MTD software options →
  2. Set up your categories — match HMRC's standard list above
  3. Connect to HMRC — authorise your software via Government Gateway
  4. Start recording from 6 April 2026 — record every transaction as it happens
  5. Submit Q1 by 5 August 2026 — your first quarterly update

Related guides

📦 Get MTD-Ready: The Complete Toolkit

Checklists, record-keeping templates, software comparison guide, and step-by-step setup instructions. Everything you need to be compliant by April 2026.

Get the MTD Readiness Toolkit — £14 →


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