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Missed Your Self-Assessment Deadline? Your 7-Day Action Plan
Updated: 2026-03-08 · For UK freelancers and self-employed
If you missed the 31 January self-assessment deadline, you're not alone — over 700,000 people miss it every year. The key now isn't panic. It's action.
The faster you act, the less you'll pay in penalties.
What you're facing right now
Penalty cascade for late filing:
| When | Penalty |
| 1 day late | £100 automatic (even if you owe £0) |
| 3 months late | £10/day for up to 90 days (max £900) |
| 6 months late | £300 or 5% of tax due (whichever is greater) |
| 12 months late | £300 or 5% of tax due (in serious cases, up to 100%) |
Plus interest at 7.75% APR on unpaid tax from 1 February.
Example: If you owe £3,000 and file in June, you're looking at: £100 penalty + £310 daily penalties + ~£233 interest = £643 on top of your tax bill. File this week and you pay just the £100.
Use our penalty calculator to see your exact exposure.
The 7-day plan
Day 1: Register and gather documents
Morning (2 hours):
- If not registered: register for self-assessment now (UTR arrives within 10 working days)
- If already registered: locate your UTR and Government Gateway login
- Gather: bank statements, sales invoices, expense receipts, P60/P45, dividend vouchers
Afternoon (1 hour):
Create a simple spreadsheet: income sources, business expenses, tax already paid. Rough numbers are fine — you can amend later.
Day 2: Calculate income and expenses
For freelancers/sole traders:
- Total all client payments received between 6 April 2024 – 5 April 2025
- Include cash, bank transfers, PayPal, Stripe — everything
- Total allowable expenses: office costs, travel (45p/mile first 10,000), software, professional fees, marketing, use of home
Common mistakes: claiming personal expenses, forgetting cash income, mixing business and personal spending.
Day 3: Set up HMRC online or software
Option A: HMRC's free online service — best for simple returns (just self-employment income)
Option B: Commercial software (TaxCalc £75/year, QuickBooks £10/month, FreeAgent £19/month) — needed for complex returns
Option C: Hire an accountant (£150-£400) — worth it if you're overwhelmed or have complex affairs
Day 4: Complete the return
Block out 3-4 hours. Work through section by section:
- Personal details — name, UTR, NI number
- Self-employment (SA103S) — turnover, expenses, net profit
- Employment — if you also had PAYE work (often pre-filled)
- Other income — savings interest, dividends, rental
- Tax reliefs — pension contributions, Gift Aid, Marriage Allowance
- Student loan — select your plan type
Save your progress. Sleep on it before submitting.
Day 5: Review and submit
Morning checks:
- Does income match your bank statements?
- Did you claim all allowable expenses?
- Does the tax calculation look reasonable?
- Watch for red flags: round numbers, expenses exceeding income
Afternoon: Submit. Save your confirmation receipt.
Day 6: Address the £100 penalty
The penalty notice arrives within 4-6 weeks. You can appeal if you have a reasonable excuse:
- ✅ Serious illness or hospital admission
- ✅ Bereavement of close family
- ✅ Fire, flood, or theft affecting records
- ✅ HMRC system outage near deadline
- ❌ Too busy, forgot, didn't know, couldn't afford accountant
Read our full guide: Reasonable excuse for late tax return →
Appeal template:
HM Revenue and Customs
Self-Assessment
BX9 1AS
Re: Appeal against £100 late-filing penalty
UTR: [your 10-digit number]
Tax year: 2024/25
Dear Sir/Madam,
I am writing to appeal the £100 late-filing penalty for the above tax year.
I have a reasonable excuse for filing late: [explain your circumstances in 2-3 sentences].
I have now filed my return (submitted on [date]) and paid the tax owed in full.
I attach [evidence] in support of this appeal.
I request that you cancel the penalty on the grounds of reasonable excuse.
Yours faithfully,
[Your name]
Day 7: Set up payment and prevent next year
Pay your tax:
- Bank transfer (fastest — use UTR as reference)
- Direct Debit via Government Gateway
- Debit card online (instant)
Can't pay in full? Call the HMRC Payment Support Service on 0300 200 3822 to request a Time to Pay arrangement before the payment deadline.
Prevent it next year:
- Set quarterly calendar reminders (July, October, January, April)
- Track income and expenses monthly, not once a year
- Set aside 25-30% of profit each month for tax
- Check if Making Tax Digital applies to you
The bottom line
Filing this week costs you £100 in penalties. Waiting until summer could cost £700+. The worst thing you can do is nothing.
HMRC doesn't care if you're stressed, busy, or confused. They care that you file and pay. Block out 3 days, follow the plan above, and get it done.
Related guides
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