What Is Making Tax Digital for VAT?

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Making Tax Digital for VAT: What It Actually Means for Your Business

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6 min read April 2026 Luke Jackson
Making Tax Digital for VAT is HMRC’s requirement that all VAT-registered businesses keep digital records and submit VAT returns through compatible software. It’s been mandatory for everyone who is VAT registered since April 2022, so if you’re registered and still doing things the old way, you’re likely out of compliance. This article covers who it applies to, what you actually need to do, and what the penalties look like if you’ve been ignoring it.
Small business owner reviewing VAT records on a laptop, representing Making Tax Digital for VAT compliance

What is Making Tax Digital for VAT? It’s the question most VAT-registered business owners wish they’d asked sooner, and the honest answer is simpler than HMRC’s guidance makes it sound.

What Making Tax Digital for VAT actually is

Making Tax Digital for VAT (MTD for VAT) is HMRC’s rule that VAT-registered businesses must keep their records digitally and submit their VAT returns using compatible software. You can no longer log into HMRC’s old portal, type in a few numbers, and call it done. The records behind those numbers need to be held digitally and the submission needs to go through approved software that connects directly to HMRC’s systems.

According to HMRC’s final evaluation of Making Tax Digital for VAT, the scheme became mandatory in April 2019 for businesses above the VAT registration threshold, and was extended to cover all VAT-registered businesses from April 2022. That second date is the one that catches people out. There’s no lower threshold anymore. If you’re VAT registered, this applies to you.

Worth knowing

There’s a separate MTD scheme coming for Income Tax called MTD for ITSA, which affects sole traders and landlords earning over £50,000 from April 2026. That’s a different programme with its own rules and deadlines. This article focuses specifically on MTD for VAT.

Does MTD for VAT apply to you?

If you’re VAT registered and trading in the UK, yes. It doesn’t matter whether you’re a sole trader, a limited company, a contractor, or a landlord. The original April 2019 rollout covered businesses above the £85,000 VAT registration threshold, and from April 2022 the requirement was extended to every VAT-registered business, regardless of turnover.

Exemptions do exist, but they’re narrow. HMRC may grant an exemption if using a computer is not reasonably practicable due to age, disability, or a location without reliable internet. These are genuinely rare. If you run an active business and you’re VAT registered, the safest assumption is that MTD for VAT applies to you and has done for a while. The Association of Taxation Technicians references HMRC’s VAT Notice 700/22 as the definitive official guidance if you want to check your specific position.

Not sure if your setup is compliant? MTD for VAT support from Anchor Accounts & Books I can check your current VAT setup, move you onto compatible software, and handle your submissions going forward, so you don’t have to think about it again.

What you actually need to do in practice

MTD for VAT requires three things: keep your VAT records in a digital format, use software that is approved for MTD submissions, and submit your return through that software rather than via HMRC’s manual portal. Approved software includes QuickBooks, FreeAgent, Xero and Sage, all of which connect directly to HMRC’s systems. There are also free bridging tools available if you want to continue using spreadsheets as your primary records.

A bridging tool acts as a link between your spreadsheet and HMRC’s submission system, pulling the figures across digitally. It’s a legal route, though it does add a step compared to using dedicated cloud accounting software. For most small businesses, switching to software like QuickBooks or FreeAgent tends to save time overall, since the VAT return is largely built automatically from your day-to-day records.

What happens if you’re not compliant

HMRC uses a penalty points system for late or missing MTD submissions. Each missed submission adds a point, and once you reach four points a £200 fine is issued. Points reduce over time if you start submitting on time consistently, but they don’t clear quickly. The system is designed to penalise persistent non-compliance rather than a single honest mistake.

The other thing worth knowing is that HMRC can tell whether a submission came through compatible software or not, because the digital route leaves a clear trail. Typing figures manually into the old portal is no longer a compliant submission method. If that’s still how you’ve been doing it, that’s the first thing to change. HMRC publishes a list of compatible software options, including free tools, so cost doesn’t need to be a barrier.

LJ
Luke Jackson

MTD for VAT is genuinely one of those things that’s less complicated than the name suggests, once you’ve got the right setup in place. If you’re not sure whether your current software qualifies, or you’ve been doing things manually and want to sort it out properly, drop me a message and I’ll point you in the right direction.

Not sure if your VAT setup is MTD compliant?

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