Making Tax Digital for electricians: what's actually changing in April 2026
TL;DR: Making Tax Digital for Income Tax (MTD ITSA) hits self-employed electricians in three waves, based on qualifying income from self-employment and/or property: over £50,000 from 6 April 2026, over £30,000 from 6 April 2027, over £20,000 from 6 April 2028. Three things change for your business: digital records (paper is out), four quarterly summary submissions per tax year (plus the year-end declaration you already do), and a piece of HMRC-compatible filing software to handle the submissions. The work itself is small, about ten minutes a quarter once your records are in shape. The shift is the rhythm: from a once-a-year January scramble to a four-times-a-year discipline.
If you're a self-employed UK electrician, the headline news is short. MTD ITSA becomes mandatory in three steps, based on qualifying income from self-employment and/or property:
- From 6 April 2026 — qualifying income over £50,000.
- From 6 April 2027 — qualifying income over £30,000.
- From 6 April 2028 — qualifying income over £20,000.
That will catch many established sole-trader electricians, especially those with regular job income across the year. If you also rent out a property on the side, that rental income counts toward the same threshold.
The three real changes:
- Digital records, not paper. Income and expenses captured in a structured digital form. A spreadsheet can work, but only if it pairs with MTD-compatible bridging software for the actual submissions. Cloud accounting software does both jobs natively. The shoebox-of-receipts approach is no longer compliant.
- Four quarterly summary updates per tax year, plus your year-end final declaration. The quarterly updates are lightweight: total income, total expenses, by category. The reconciliation, the allowable-vs-not-allowable judgements, and the actual tax calculation all happen at the year-end declaration in January, the same as today.
- HMRC-compatible filing software for the quarterly submissions. The old self-assessment portal won't accept MTD ITSA submissions. You need either a cloud accounting tool that handles the submission natively, or a spreadsheet paired with bridging software (typically £30–£50 per year).
Three changes. The rest is operational discipline.
Worth saying plainly: MTD doesn't change what tax you owe. It changes when HMRC sees what you owe. Same money, different rhythm.
What this means for your week
Most electricians don't need to overhaul how they keep records. If you already invoice properly, run business spend through a separate bank account, and log mileage when you drive to a job, you're 80 per cent of the way there. The remaining 20 per cent is making sure that record is in a structured digital format your filing tool can read.
The electricians who'll find this hardest are the ones currently running on memory and a glovebox of receipts. If your "system" is "I give the lot to my accountant in January," MTD effectively makes that approach non-compliant. Your accountant cannot submit a quarterly update if you've handed them nothing for the quarter.
Practical move for the next 30 days: get every business transaction running through a separate business bank account. Set a 15-minute weekly admin slot (Friday afternoon works for most electricians once the van's parked) to log invoices, expenses, and mileage against the right categories. That single habit takes you most of the way.
What HMRC's quarterly updates actually look like
A quarterly update is not a tax return. It's a summary submission. For an electrician, the categories you'll typically report are:
Total income for the quarter: installation jobs, fault-finding callouts, EICR work, PAT testing, maintenance contracts, and any retail sales of parts.
Total expenses by category: materials (cable, consumer units, MCBs, accessories), tools and test equipment, vehicle costs including fuel, trade insurance, professional memberships (NICEIC, NAPIT, ELECSA, Part P scheme fees), training and CPD, accountancy, bank charges, software, phone, workwear and PPE, and use-of-home if you do paperwork from a home office.
You don't reconcile each line at the quarterly stage. You report category totals. The reconciliation, the allowable-vs-not-allowable judgements, and the tax calculation all happen at the final year-end declaration.
This is why the quarterly updates feel less burdensome than people fear, once your records are in shape. If your spreadsheet aggregates by category automatically, the quarterly submission is a copy-paste of the totals into your filing tool. Ten minutes per quarter, not a weekend.
What about VAT and CIS?
VAT MTD has been mandatory since 2019. If you're VAT-registered you've already been doing quarterly digital submissions for VAT, and ITSA MTD layers on top as a separate filing. They're independent quarterly cycles.
CIS (Construction Industry Scheme) is also separate. If you work as a subcontractor under CIS or pay subcontractors yourself, those monthly returns continue as they always did. ITSA MTD doesn't replace CIS, it sits alongside it.
For non-VAT-registered electricians (most sole-trader sparkies running below the £90,000 VAT threshold), ITSA MTD is the first time you'll have done digital quarterly reporting at all. Build the muscle now, before the deadline catches you.
Cloud accounting, spreadsheet, or accountant — three honest routes
There are three legitimate routes. Each has a real fit and a real cost. Pick once, commit, and stop second-guessing.
Cloud accounting software like Xero, QuickBooks or FreeAgent. Subscription cost £12–£30 per month. Includes automated bank reconciliation, invoicing, and integrated MTD submission. Best fit: VAT-registered electricians, electricians with employees, or anyone with a high transaction volume.
Spreadsheet plus bridging software. The spreadsheet is your record of income and expenses; bridging software (typically £30–£50 per year) reads the spreadsheet and submits to HMRC in the format MTD requires. Best fit: sole-trader electricians with relatively simple finances and a preference for one-time purchases over monthly subscriptions.
Hand it to your accountant. They handle the quarterly submissions on your behalf. Costs more than DIY, but if your accountant already does your year-end, the marginal cost is manageable. The catch: they can only file what you give them. Quarterly cadence still requires you to maintain the records weekly.
There's no "best" answer. The right choice depends on your transaction volume, your tech comfort, and what you already pay for.
What to do this quarter
If you're still trading on a fragmented record-keeping system, treat 6 April 2026 as a hard deadline and work backwards.
- Open a separate business bank account if you don't already have one. Move all business income and expenses through it. Every other MTD step gets easier when business spend stops mixing with personal.
- Pick one tool (spreadsheet plus bridging, cloud accounting, or your accountant) and commit. Set it up properly with the right categories for electrical work.
- Start a 15-minute weekly admin slot. Log the week's invoices, expenses, and mileage. Friday afternoon, van parked, kettle on.
- If you're VAT-registered, layer ITSA MTD onto your existing quarterly rhythm. Same month-end discipline, second submission.
- If you're not VAT-registered, build the rhythm now. The first April 2026 quarterly window will arrive faster than you expect.
If you do nothing else this month: the bank account split. Everything cascades from that one decision.
For the cross-trade view, the plumbers' version of this post covers the same MTD changes from a plumbing-business angle, useful if you work alongside plumbers on heating jobs.
LaunchKit makes a niche-specific MTD Compliance Kit for electricians. It's an Excel workbook with the income categories, expense categories, and quarterly summary tabs already set up for electrical work, including separate columns for EICR revenue, Part P notification fees, and NICEIC/NAPIT membership costs. £16.99 on Etsy and on yourlaunchkit.co.uk. One-time purchase. Works in Excel or Google Sheets, and pairs with any HMRC-recognised bridging tool when it's time to submit.
If a structured spreadsheet plus bridging is the right fit for your business, the kit takes ten minutes to set up. If you want full cloud accounting instead, that's a different decision and we'd say so plainly. Either way, the worst route is no route.
The kit pairs with the electrician business documents bundle (£19.99) if you also want contracts, quotation templates, and invoice forms with the right MTD-friendly categories built in.
This article is general guidance, not tax advice. For your specific tax position, consult a qualified accountant or tax adviser.
Related LaunchKit tools
Templates mentioned in this guide
Electrician MTD Compliance Kit — Premium
Making Tax Digital is becoming part of the record-keeping reality for many self-employed electricians, and the real headache isn't the rule — it's keeping records clean across a year of callouts, materials runs, mileage and CIS deductions when half the receipts live in the van glovebox and half in your inbox. This Compliance Kit is an Excel workbook covering Income Tracker, Expense Log, Expense Summary, Quarterly Summary, Annual Summary, Reconciliation, Mileage Log with a simplified-vs-actual switch, Year-End Adjustments, Tax Reserve Scenarios, Evidence Log, Compliance Warnings, Allowable Expenses Guide, Deadline Calendar, Quarterly Checklist, and an Executive Dashboard that surfaces the figures your accountant actually asks for. Available in England and Scotland versions to match where the business is based. Built for UK sole-trader electricians who want quarterly review to be a 30-minute job, not a weekend search through receipts. Not a tax-return tool — a record-keeping workbook for organising your figures — a record-keeping foundation that makes filing simpler.
Electrician Business Documents — Premium
An electrician's day rarely ends when the last circuit is tested - landlords, letting agents and commercial clients still want the paperwork before they sign off on the job and release the final payment the following week. LaunchKit Premium for an electrician includes all 17 business documents as interactive fillable PDF plus editable Word. Risk assessments, method statements, EICR covers, completion certificates and PAT testing records fill in on a tablet on site, and the customer terms, quotation template, warranty documents, aftercare sheet, feedback form and complaint procedure rebrand in Word with your business name, NICEIC or NAPIT number and logo. COSHH forms, subcontractor agreement, invoice template and GDPR notice all match in tone across the set. Two formats from one download - the electrician's paperwork ships with the job instead of trailing it by email the following week.
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