Who Needs to File as Self-Employed?
You need to register for Self Assessment if you're self-employed as a sole trader and your business income exceeds £1,000 in a tax year (6 April to 5 April). This applies even if you have another job.
Income Threshold for Self-Assessment:
Trading allowance - if you earn less than this, you don't need to register. Over £1,000, you must file.
Professions That Need Self Assessment
Outside IR35? Must file Self Assessment even through umbrella companies.
CIS subcontractors need to file to reclaim deductions and report income.
Uber, Deliveroo, Just Eat - all platform economy workers must file.
Designers, writers, photographers with project-based income.
Doctors, nurses, dentists with agency or locum work.
Independent consultants with multiple client engagements.
What Counts as Self-Employed Income?
Any money you earn from your trade, profession, or vocation counts as self-employed income. This includes:
- Money from clients or customers
- Payments from online platforms (Upwork, Fiverr, PeoplePerHour)
- Income from selling goods or services
- Commission-based earnings
- Income from multiple small jobs or gigs
- Part-time self-employment alongside employment
Expenses You Can Claim (Most Missed!)
Most self-employed people miss legitimate deductions. Here's what you can claim:
- Simplified expenses: £6/week (no receipts needed)
- Actual costs: Proportion of rent, mortgage interest, council tax
- Heating, lighting, broadband (business portion)
- Office furniture and equipment
- Simplified: 45p/mile first 10,000 miles, then 25p/mile
- Actual: Fuel, insurance, repairs, MOT, road tax
- Parking and tolls for business trips
- Hire charges for business vehicles
- Mobile phone (business portion)
- Software subscriptions (Adobe, Microsoft 365)
- Website hosting and domain fees
- Cloud storage and backup services
- Training courses related to your business
- Professional membership fees
- Trade magazine subscriptions
- Conference and seminar attendance
- Business cards and stationery
- Advertising costs (Google Ads, social media)
- Website development and maintenance
- Photography for business use
- Bank charges on business accounts
- Accountant's fees (including this service!)
- Business insurance premiums
- Client entertainment (limited rules apply)
Client: Sarah, freelance graphic designer, London
Income: £45,000 from design projects
Initial DIY Return: Claimed £5,200 in expenses, tax due: £7,890
Our Professional Review Found:
- Missed home office deduction: £1,560 (actual costs method)
- Unclaimed software subscriptions: £840
- Business portion of mobile/internet: £720
- Professional development courses: £1,200
- Client meeting expenses: £420
Result: Total expenses increased to £9,940
Tax Saving: £2,340 reduction in tax bill
Net Cost of Our Service: £149 (saved £2,191 net)
Critical Deadlines & Penalties
Penalty Structure for Late Filing
| Days Late | Penalty | Additional Charges |
|---|---|---|
| 1 day | £100 | Immediate penalty |
| 3 months | £10/day | Up to £900 over 90 days |
| 6 months | 5% of tax due | Or £300, whichever is greater |
| 12 months | Another 5% | Additional 5% of tax due |
Making Tax Digital (MTD) for Self-Employed
Starting April 2026: Self-employed with income over £50,000 must submit quarterly returns.
Current System: 1 annual Self Assessment return
MTD System: 4 quarterly returns + 1 final declaration = 5 submissions/year
Our MTD Service: £60 per quarter - we handle everything, no software subscriptions needed.
