HMRC appeals to accountants for MTD pilot candidates
Earlier in 2022, the number of taxpayers eligible for the current Making Tax Digital pilot was expanded. HMRC is now actively encouraging accountants and tax advisors to refer their clients to the service. What does it mean if your advisor recommends you for the pilot?

Making Tax Digital for Income Tax Self-Assessment will start to be rolled out to some businesses in 2024. Ahead of this, HMRC is running a pilot to ensure that the new system gets a thorough testing before becoming mandatory. However, take up has reportedly been poor. In its latest Agent Update, HMRC encourages authorised representatives, including accountants and tax advisors, to recommend clients for the pilot scheme. If you are approached by your advisor, what should you keep in mind? While you're not obliged to join the pilot, there are some advantages to doing so. It gives you the chance to get used to the system in the testing period, meaning there will be no penalties for getting things wrong. It's also an opportunity to help provide feedback on how things can be improved.
HMRC also confirms that the pilot will be further expanded later in 2022 to include taxpayers who need to report the following:
- Construction industry scheme deductions
- Private pension contributions relief claims
- Student loan repayments
- Additional information (SA101)
- Foreign income
- Voluntary Class 2 NI contributions
- Recipients of transferable marriage allowance
- Capital gains tax reporting
Related Topics
-
HMRC has withdrawn Form 652. How should you notify VAT errors going forward?
-
Can paying interest to your company save tax?
You recently borrowed a substantial sum of money from your company rather than take extra salary or dividends. Your bookkeeper says it might be more tax efficient if your company charged you interest. This sounds counter-intuitive but is it correct?
-
Reverse charge and end user rules: opportunity?
If you sell construction services to other builders, you need to consider the domestic reverse charge rules. You must apply these where your customer is an end user. How might this create a cash-flow advantage?