UK landlords with rental income above £50,000 are now inside MTD ITSA. The quarterly cadence is one thing — the property-specific reporting categories are another. Here's the landlord-specific picture.
The first MTD ITSA quarterly submission deadline is 7 August 2026 — and many sole traders have never used HMRC's API. This walkthrough covers exactly what to send, when, and how to fix it when something breaks.
Five HMRC-recognised platforms dominate the MTD ITSA market in 2026. We compared pricing, features and real-world fit for sole traders and landlords now scrambling to comply.
Sole traders above £50,000 turnover have been in MTD ITSA since 6 April 2026. If you haven't started, here's the ten-step compliance path that gets you to your 7 August deadline without panic.
MTD for Income Tax Self Assessment went live three weeks ago. If your gross income from self-employment or rental property tops £50,000, quarterly digital submissions are now compulsory. Here's the full picture.
Council tax confuses a lot of people, partly because the banding system dates back to 1991 property valuations. Here's how it actually works and what you can do if you think your band is wrong.
Stamp Duty Land Tax catches many buyers off guard, especially when they realise it's a significant chunk of their moving costs. Here's what the current thresholds look like and how the calculation actually works.
Around 12 million people in the UK file self assessment returns each year. If you're self-employed, a landlord, or earn over £150,000, here's what you need to know.
Sold shares, a buy-to-let, or some crypto? Capital Gains Tax might apply. The rules have tightened recently, so here's what the current landscape looks like.
Inheritance tax is often called the most hated tax in Britain. With frozen thresholds and rising property values, more families are getting caught by it than ever before.
Your tax code is a string of numbers and letters that determines how much income tax is deducted from your pay. Getting it wrong can cost you hundreds.
If one of you earns under the personal allowance and the other is a basic rate taxpayer, you could be missing out on a straightforward £252 annual saving.