Making Tax Digital for Electricians: Your Complete MTD Guide
Important: April 2026 deadline
Making Tax Digital for Income Tax Self Assessment (MTD for ITSA) becomes mandatory from 6 April 2026 for self-employed people and landlords with qualifying income above £50,000. If you are a self-employed electrician earning over this threshold, you must act before April 2026.
Self-employed electricians face a particular layer of complexity when it comes to tax: many work under the Construction Industry Scheme (CIS), which already involves deductions at source, monthly returns, and verification requirements. Now Making Tax Digital for Income Tax adds another set of obligations on top.
This guide cuts through the complexity. Whether you are a sole trader electrician doing domestic installations, a subcontractor on commercial builds, or a NICEIC-registered contractor running a small team, here is what MTD for ITSA means for you and exactly what you need to do.
What is Making Tax Digital?
Making Tax Digital (MTD) is HMRC's programme to move all tax reporting away from annual paper-based returns and onto digital, real-time submissions made through compatible software. The programme has been rolling out since 2019, starting with MTD for VAT.
The next major phase — MTD for Income Tax Self Assessment (MTD for ITSA) — fundamentally changes how sole traders report their income to HMRC. Rather than completing one Self Assessment tax return per year, you will send four quarterly updates throughout the year and a final end-of-year declaration. All of this must be done through MTD-compatible software; you cannot use the HMRC online portal or paper forms.
HMRC has confirmed that MTD for ITSA is not a rebranding exercise — it is a genuine structural change to the UK tax system. The goal is to give both taxpayers and HMRC a more accurate, up-to-date picture of income and tax throughout the year, reducing errors and the need for year-end corrections.
Does MTD for ITSA apply to electricians?
MTD for ITSA applies to you if you are self-employed (or receive rental income) and your gross qualifying income exceeds the relevant threshold. HMRC is phasing in the requirement by income level:
| Annual qualifying income | MTD start date |
|---|---|
| Over £50,000 | 6 April 2026 |
| Over £30,000 | 6 April 2027 |
| Over £20,000 | 6 April 2028 (proposed) |
The threshold is based on your gross income — the total value of your invoices before expenses — not your profit. A self-employed electrician invoicing £60,000 a year but netting only £35,000 after materials and overheads still falls above the £50,000 threshold and must comply from April 2026.
If you have multiple sources of self-employment income or also receive rental income, these are combined when assessing whether you meet the threshold. An electrician earning £40,000 from their trade and £15,000 from a rental property would have qualifying income of £55,000 and would be in scope from 2026.
Electricians working through a limited company
If your electrical business operates as a limited company, MTD for ITSA does not apply — limited companies pay Corporation Tax, which has its own separate digitalisation roadmap. However, if you pay yourself a salary through PAYE and also take dividends that push you into Self Assessment, you may still have ITSA obligations. Speak to your accountant about your specific structure.
CIS and MTD: how they interact for electricians
Many electricians work as subcontractors under the Construction Industry Scheme (CIS). Under CIS, contractors deduct tax at source — either 20% for registered subcontractors with a standard deduction or 30% for unregistered ones — and pay it directly to HMRC on your behalf. You then reclaim any overpaid tax through your Self Assessment return.
Under MTD for ITSA, CIS works differently in some important respects:
CIS deductions are still reported separately
Contractors continue to submit monthly CIS returns to HMRC. MTD for ITSA does not replace the contractor's monthly CIS submission. However, as a subcontractor, your quarterly MTD updates will reflect your gross income, and the CIS deductions suffered will be accounted for in your final declaration.
Your gross CIS income counts toward the MTD threshold
When calculating whether you are above the £50,000 qualifying income threshold, HMRC uses your gross CIS invoiced amount — before deductions. A subcontractor electrician invoicing £55,000 to contractors (even if £11,000 was deducted at 20%) still has £55,000 qualifying income and must register for MTD from April 2026.
Gross payment status affects your cashflow picture
If you have applied for and received gross payment status from HMRC — meaning contractors pay you without deducting CIS — your invoiced amounts come in full but you are responsible for managing your own tax payments. MTD quarterly updates will make your estimated tax position visible throughout the year, which is particularly useful for planning CIS gross payment cashflow.
For electricians who are both a contractor (using other subcontractors) and a subcontractor themselves, the MTD for ITSA obligation relates to your personal Income Tax position. Your monthly CIS contractor returns are a separate filing obligation that continues unchanged.
Digital records electricians must keep
MTD for ITSA requires you to record all business income and expenses digitally throughout the year. The key principle is that records must be kept digitally at the point of transaction — not retrospectively before a quarterly deadline. This is a meaningful change if you currently jot things down on paper or rely on an annual bookkeeping exercise.
For an electrician, the records you must maintain digitally include:
Income records
- Invoices raised (including CIS invoices to contractors)
- Payments received for each invoice
- CIS deduction statements received from contractors
- Any other income (e.g. materials sold on)
- Credit notes or reversals
Expense records
- Cable, fittings, consumer units, and other materials
- Test equipment and tools
- Van costs, fuel, and mileage
- NICEIC, NAPIT, or Part P registration fees
- Trade association membership (ECA, NICEIC etc.)
- Subcontractor payments and CIS deductions made
- Public liability and other insurance premiums
- Training and certification costs (e.g. 18th edition updates)
NICEIC and NAPIT registration fees are a legitimate business expense for electricians and must be recorded. Similarly, the cost of keeping your 18th edition qualifications current, test equipment calibration, and Part P notification fees are all allowable expenses that reduce your taxable profit — and they should be captured digitally throughout the year rather than remembered at year-end.
What counts as a digital record?
HMRC specifies that records must be captured and stored digitally, but does not require you to scan every physical receipt. You must record the key details — date, amount, category — in your software. Many MTD-compatible tools also let you photograph receipts on your phone, which is ideal for electricians buying materials from trade counters.
A paper receipt kept in a box and entered into a spreadsheet at the end of the quarter does technically meet the spirit of the rule as long as the spreadsheet is MTD-compliant — but using dedicated software that captures expenses in real time is far simpler and more defensible in the event of an HMRC enquiry.
Quarterly updates: what electricians actually submit
Under MTD for ITSA, you submit a summary of your income and expenses for each quarter directly to HMRC through your software. These are not tax payments and do not require detailed transaction-by-transaction listings — they are categorised summaries that HMRC uses to calculate an in-year estimate of your tax liability.
| Quarter | Period covered | Submission deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Quarter 1 | 6 April – 5 July | 7 August |
| Quarter 2 | 6 July – 5 October | 7 November |
| Quarter 3 | 6 October – 5 January | 7 February |
| Quarter 4 | 6 January – 5 April | 7 May |
After the four quarterly updates, you submit a final declaration — the replacement for your current Self Assessment tax return. This is where you add any non-business income (dividends, savings interest), claim reliefs such as marriage allowance, and confirm your final tax position. The deadline for the final declaration remains 31 January following the end of the tax year.
For electricians working under CIS, the final declaration is particularly important: it is where you claim credit for CIS deductions that contractors have already paid to HMRC on your behalf. You will need the CIS deduction statements your contractors provide to reconcile these figures.
Payments on account and quarterly updates
HMRC's current Payments on Account system — where you pay 50% of last year's tax bill in January and another 50% in July — continues under MTD. However, the in-year estimates generated by your quarterly updates give you a much more accurate picture of whether your payments on account are likely to be sufficient, helping you avoid a large balancing payment in January.
Penalties for non-compliance
HMRC uses a points-based penalty system for MTD for ITSA. Missing a quarterly update earns you a penalty point. Accumulate four points — meaning you have missed a full year of quarterly submissions — and you receive a fixed £200 financial penalty. Additional missed submissions then each attract another £200 fine.
This is a more forgiving system than some feared, but the penalties compound quickly if you continue to miss deadlines. And crucially, the points-based system applies to submission deadlines — separate late payment interest and surcharges still apply if you pay your tax late, exactly as they do today.
Penalty structure at a glance
- 1st, 2nd, 3rd missed quarterly update: Penalty point added — no financial penalty yet
- 4th missed update (full year of failures): £200 fixed penalty
- Each subsequent missed quarterly update: £200 per missed update
- Missed final declaration: £200 fixed penalty (immediate, no points needed)
- Late tax payment: Daily interest from HMRC (separate to submission penalties)
Penalty points reset after 24 consecutive months of full compliance for quarterly reporters. The practical takeaway: do not let quarterly updates lapse for a full year. If your software automates the submissions, this is very easy to avoid.
HMRC ran a voluntary pilot for MTD for ITSA during 2024 and 2025. From 6 April 2026, compliance is no longer optional for those above the threshold. HMRC has made clear the April 2026 date for the £50,000+ threshold is firm and will not be delayed further.
How InvoiceAdept helps electricians stay MTD-compliant
InvoiceAdept is built for UK tradespeople, including electricians who need professional invoicing that handles both direct customer billing and CIS compliance. The platform is designed to be used on a phone between jobs — not at a desk at the end of a long day.
Digital records without the admin
Every invoice you raise in InvoiceAdept is stored digitally the instant you create it. Payments are logged when they arrive. You accumulate compliant digital records throughout the year without any separate bookkeeping step — your invoicing activity is your record.
CIS invoice support
InvoiceAdept supports CIS-style invoices, making it straightforward to generate the correct invoice format when billing contractors who will deduct CIS at source. The deduction is tracked so your income records reflect both the gross amount invoiced and the net received.
Quarterly updates to HMRC
InvoiceAdept generates your income and expense summary for each quarter and submits it directly to HMRC through the MTD for ITSA API. No manual calculations, no navigating the HMRC portal, no risk of missing a deadline.
Invoice via WhatsApp or email
Send professional invoices from your phone the moment you finish an installation or test — directly via WhatsApp or email. For electricians working across multiple sites, this keeps your records current without waiting until you are back at a desk.
Card payments with one link
Add a payment link to every invoice. Domestic customers pay by card in one tap; the payment is logged instantly. No more waiting on BACS transfers or chasing customers by phone.
Tax position dashboard
See a live estimate of your income tax position throughout the year based on your invoiced income. This is particularly useful for electricians on gross payment status who need to set aside tax from every payment received.
Whether you are doing domestic rewires, commercial fit-outs, or EV charge point installations, InvoiceAdept gives you a compliant, professional invoicing and record-keeping setup in minutes. There is no complicated onboarding — import your customer list, create your first invoice, and you are ready.
Disclaimer: This article is for general information only and does not constitute tax or financial advice. MTD for ITSA rules are set by HMRC and may change. CIS obligations are separate to MTD for ITSA and have their own compliance requirements. Always consult a qualified accountant or tax adviser for advice specific to your business. For official guidance, visit gov.uk/making-tax-digital.
Get MTD-ready before April 2026
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