MTD ITSA pilot to become more accessible in July
Making Tax Digital for Income Tax Self Assessment (MTD ITSA) will begin to become compulsory from 2024. However, HMRC is encouraging taxpayers to sign up early via the pilot scheme. Now it has announced that from July 2022, the pilot will be expanded, allowing more individuals to join. Who will be eligible?

MTD ITSA will become compulsory for taxpayers with self-employment or property income from April 2024. Certain categories of taxpayer have been able to sign up early to have as much time as possible to familiarise themselves with the requirements, such as keeping digital records and sending quarterly updates. Taxpayers using the pilot still have to submit a tax return at the moment. However, until now the eligibility criteria have been criticised for being very narrow. Coupled with this, the number of software providers that are currently compliant is relatively small. As a result, the uptake in joining the pilot has been very small. HMRC has now announced that taxpayers with the following reportable items will be able to join from July 2022:
- self-employment(s)
- UK property
- Gift Aid
- Pay As You Earn income, including pensions
- UK interest
- UK dividends.
It appears that those with income from other sources, partnerships and with certain charges collected via self-assessment, e.g. the High Income Child Benefit charge, will continue to be excluded for the time being. Anyone wishing to obtain further information should contact their software provider, or HMRC by email at mailboxmakingtaxdigital@hmrc.gov.uk.
Related Topics
-
The Deputy Prime Minister, SDLT and a tale of woe
You can’t have missed the recent furore surrounding the apparent tax dodging exploits of Angela Rayner. The issues involved might seem remote for most taxpayers, but are there lessons to be learned for all of us?
-
In-year relief claim? Prove it
Taxpayers not in self-assessment and who need to claim relief on pension contributions must now send evidence to HMRC. What’s the full story?
-
HMRC has withdrawn Form 652. How should you notify VAT errors going forward?