Whether you're a domestic sparky, a commercial electrician working under CIS, or building your own electrical contracting business — understanding your tax obligations will save you thousands over your career. This guide covers everything self-employed electricians need to know.
Contents
Employment Status: Getting It Right
HMRC scrutinises electricians heavily for disguised employment — particularly those working on long-term contracts for a single main contractor. The consequences of getting it wrong are severe: backdated PAYE, NICs, penalties, and interest.
You're likely genuinely self-employed if you:
- Work for multiple clients or customers
- Provide your own tools, van, and test equipment
- Can substitute another qualified electrician
- Quote fixed prices and bear financial risk on jobs
- Decide your own working hours and methods
Red flags HMRC looks for:
- Working exclusively for one contractor for months
- Being told exactly when and where to work
- Using the contractor's tools
- No right to send a substitute
- Being paid a day rate regardless of output
Use the HMRC CEST tool to check your status. If in doubt, get professional advice — the cost of an accountant's opinion is far less than a backdated tax bill.
CIS for Electricians
If you do any electrical work on construction projects — including rewiring, first and second fix, fire alarm installation, or maintenance work on commercial buildings — you'll fall under the Construction Industry Scheme.
Key points
- Register with HMRC for CIS — deduction rate drops from 30% to 20%
- Contractors deduct tax at source before paying you
- You receive payment statements showing the deduction
- Deductions offset your tax bill at year end
- If more was deducted than you owe, you get a refund
💡 CIS refund tip: Many electricians with high expenses (tools, van, materials) end up overpaying through CIS. Check your position quarterly — if you're consistently overpaying, consider applying for gross payment status (no deductions). You'll need a clean compliance record and turnover above £30,000.
Full details in our CIS & MTD Software Guide.
Registering with HMRC
Register within 3 months of starting self-employment:
- Self Assessment: For annual tax returns
- CIS: If working under contractors (essential to get 20% rate)
- VAT: Mandatory if turnover exceeds £90,000; voluntary below this
- Class 2 National Insurance: Automatic when you register as self-employed
Should you register for VAT voluntarily?
If most of your customers are VAT-registered businesses (commercial work), voluntary VAT registration lets you reclaim VAT on tools, materials, and van costs. If most customers are domestic (homeowners), adding 20% to your prices makes you less competitive. Think carefully.
Allowable Expenses for Electricians
Materials and consumables
- Cable, trunking, conduit, clips
- Sockets, switches, consumer units, MCBs, RCDs
- Light fittings (if you supply them)
- Wago connectors, junction boxes, back boxes
- Fire alarm components, emergency lighting units
- Labels, stickers, warning signs
- Fixings, screws, rawl plugs
Business costs
- Public liability insurance (essential — typically £150–£500/year)
- Professional indemnity insurance
- Accountant or bookkeeper fees
- Phone and internet (business proportion)
- Accounting/invoicing software
- Business bank account fees
- Advertising: Checkatrade, MyBuilder, Google Ads, leaflets
- Website and email hosting
- Stationery for certificates and paperwork
PPE and workwear
- ✅ Insulated gloves, safety boots, hard hats, hi-vis
- ✅ Branded uniform (polo shirts/hoodies with company name)
- ✅ Arc flash protection
- ❌ Plain clothes, even if only worn for work
Part P and Certification Costs
These professional costs are all claimable:
- Part P registration (NAPIT, NICEIC, ELECSA, etc.) — typically £300–£600/year
- 18th Edition Wiring Regulations course + exam — claimable as updating existing skills
- ECS card renewal
- Inspection and testing qualification updates
- AM2 assessment (if updating qualification)
- CPD courses relevant to electrical work
- IET/Institution membership fees
⚠️ Training rule: HMRC allows deductions for training that updates existing knowledge. Your 18th Edition update course? Claimable. A plumbing course to add a new skill? Not claimable as a self-employed expense (though it might be via a different mechanism if you're diversifying your trade).
Van and Travel Costs
Like most trades, your van is a major expense. Two options:
Flat-rate mileage
- 45p per mile (first 10,000 business miles)
- 25p per mile (after 10,000)
- Simple but often less tax-efficient for high-mileage van users
Actual costs
- Fuel, insurance, MOT, servicing, repairs
- Van lease payments or HP interest
- Road tax, parking, congestion charges
- Claim the business-use percentage
For electricians doing 20,000+ miles per year, actual costs almost always win. Keep all receipts. See our Mileage Allowance Guide for the full breakdown.
Buying a van
Use Annual Investment Allowance (AIA) to deduct the full cost in the purchase year. At 80% business use, an £18,000 van gives you a £14,400 tax deduction — potentially saving £2,880 (basic rate) or £5,760 (higher rate) in tax.
Tools and Test Equipment
Revenue expenses (claim in full)
- Hand tools: screwdrivers, pliers, cutters, crimpers
- Drill bits, saw blades, consumable accessories
- Cable rods and draw tapes
- Small power tools under ~£500
Capital allowances (larger items)
- Multifunction tester (MFT) — £400–£1,200
- Thermal imaging camera — £200–£2,000
- PAT tester — £200–£600
- Power quality analyser
- Fluke meters and clamp meters
- SWA cable cutting tools
All qualify for AIA — deduct the full cost in the year of purchase. Calibration costs for test equipment are also claimable as revenue expenses.
Tax-Saving Strategies for Electricians
1. Maximise your expense claims
Most electricians leave money on the table. Review the expense lists above carefully — especially PPE, certification, insurance, and small tools that you might forget about.
2. Time big purchases before April 5
Need a new MFT or van? Buy before your tax year ends to claim AIA in the current year and reduce this year's tax bill.
3. Use a separate business account
Makes expense tracking simple and keeps HMRC happy. See our Business Bank Account Guide.
4. Consider incorporation at higher earnings
If you're earning above £50,000+ consistently, trading through a limited company can save tax through dividend extraction. But it adds complexity and compliance costs — get proper advice.
5. Pension contributions for tax relief
A personal pension (SIPP) gives 20% tax relief at source, with more reclaimable if you're a higher-rate taxpayer. £10,000 into a pension costs you £8,000 at basic rate, £6,000 at higher rate. See our Pension Guide.
6. Claim use-of-home if applicable
If you do admin, quoting, or invoicing from home, claim the simplified flat rate: £6/week (£312/year) with no evidence needed, or actual costs if you have a dedicated room.
Making Tax Digital
From April 2026, if your self-employed income exceeds £50,000, you must keep digital records and submit quarterly updates. The threshold drops to £30,000 from April 2027.
What this means in practice:
- Use MTD-compatible software (not spreadsheets alone)
- Record income and expenses digitally throughout the year
- Submit summaries to HMRC every quarter
- File an end-of-year declaration
Check our Best MTD Software Guide for recommendations.
Track Your Electrical Business Tax Easily
Our Freelancer Tax Tracker Spreadsheet handles income, expenses, mileage, and tax calculations — designed for UK sole traders. Works for any trade.
Get the Tax Tracker — £9Summary: Electrician Tax Checklist
| Task | When |
|---|---|
| Register as self-employed | Within 3 months of starting |
| Register for CIS | Before first contractor job |
| Keep digital records | Every job, every day |
| Set aside 25-30% for tax | Every payment received |
| Renew Part P registration | Annually |
| File self-assessment | By 31 January |
| MTD quarterly updates | From April 2026 if over £50k |