Making Tax Digital for UK wedding planners: what changes from April 2026

By the LaunchKit team

TL;DR: Making Tax Digital for Income Tax affects sole traders and landlords in stages: qualifying income over GBP 50,000 from 6 April 2026, over GBP 30,000 from 6 April 2027, and over GBP 20,000 from 6 April 2028. For UK wedding planners, the practical work is keeping digital records through the year and submitting quarterly updates from software, not rebuilding the accounts at the last minute.

If you run a wedding planner business as a sole trader, Making Tax Digital for Income Tax changes the rhythm of your admin. It does not change the underlying idea that you record income and expenses. It changes when those records need to be digital and how often summary figures are sent to HMRC.

For wedding planners, the exact start date still depends on qualifying income, so HMRC's current guidance matters more than hearsay: Use Making Tax Digital for Income Tax. Check that official guidance or speak to your accountant before making decisions for your own business.

What actually changes

For wedding planners, the change is not a new kind of tax. It is a new operating rhythm for records. Digital income and expense records need to be kept as the year goes, quarterly summaries become part of the timetable, and the final declaration still ties the year together.

That matters because deposits and staged payments can span months, while supplier-related costs need tracking. Those timings can make the records look uneven if they are only rebuilt months later. Current records make the pattern easier to explain.

What makes wedding planners different

Every business has its own record-keeping wrinkles. For wedding planners, the common ones are:

  • Deposits and staged payments can span months. Wedding income may arrive long before the event. Keep deposits and balances linked to the client.
  • Supplier-related costs need tracking. Travel, samples, software and supplier visits can sit far from the final invoice date.
  • Seasonality is strong. Spring and summer bookings can create uneven quarters. Current records explain the pattern.
  • Extras change the final price. Additional meetings, coordination hours or supplier management need written approval and finance records.

For a wedding planner, those are normal commercial patterns rather than problems by themselves. The risk is letting them sit in memory until a quarterly update or year-end review forces you to rebuild the story from fragments.

Income categories to keep clear

For a Wedding Planner, income may come from one-off jobs, repeat customers, deposits, add-ons and retained arrangements. Record each payment when it arrives and connect it back to the job, customer, booking, route or invoice that produced it.

Use the enquiry form, invoice or customer reference as the anchor for deposits, balances and late-settling income. Save receipts for planning software and travel costs as soon as they arrive, so the cost side is not waiting on customer settlement before it is recorded. If cash is still part of your business, record it in the same week. Cash is not the issue; missing records are.

Expense categories worth setting up early

Most wedding planners will need clear categories for:

  • planning software
  • travel costs
  • sample materials
  • printing
  • phone costs
  • insurance

Keep those categories stable enough that planning software, travel costs and sample materials land in the same place each month. A short, consistent list is more useful than a complicated one that changes whenever the paperwork gets busy.

A simple weekly routine

The least painful MTD preparation is weekly, not annual. For wedding planners, that means adapting the same admin habit you already need for the business:

  • record each payment against the enquiry form or invoice it belongs to
  • save receipts for planning software and travel costs
  • mark deposits, balances or delayed payments while the detail is current
  • note any unusual week or quarter while the detail is still fresh
  • move the week's income and expenses into the digital finance record

That weekly habit is not about doing a tax return every Friday. It is about making the quarterly update a summary of records you already hold from the way the wedding planner business actually runs.

Spreadsheet, software or accountant-led

For wedding planners, cloud bookkeeping software can be easier if you want bank feeds and direct submission. A spreadsheet plus bridging software can work for simpler wedding planner businesses if it is maintained properly. An accountant-led route can also work, but your accountant still needs timely digital records from you.

For many wedding planners, a spreadsheet is the bridge between informal records and full software. It works only if it is updated consistently. A spreadsheet abandoned until year-end is not a practical MTD plan.

Where LaunchKit fits

LaunchKit's Wedding Planner MTD Compliance Kit gives you a structured starting point for the records that sit around income, expenses and weekly admin. The Wedding Planner niche page shows the current product set available for this niche.

For the customer-facing document side, read Essential business documents for UK wedding planners in 2026.

This article is general guidance, not tax advice. Check HMRC guidance and speak to a qualified accountant or tax adviser about your own position.

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Wedding Planner MTD Compliance Kit — Premium

Making Tax Digital is becoming part of the record-keeping reality for many self-employed wedding planners, and the real headache isn't the rule — it's keeping records clean across a year of mixed takings across cash, card and deposits, seasonal surges, supplier invoices and turnover that shifts through the year. 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 wedding planners 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.

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Wedding Planner Business Documents — Premium

A wedding planner's job is holding a hundred moving pieces together - couples, suppliers, venues and timelines - and the paperwork has to be the one thing that doesn't slip in the final month before the day itself arrives on the calendar. LaunchKit Premium for a wedding planner covers all 17 business documents as interactive fillable PDF plus editable Word. Wedding brief, day-of timeline, vendor contact sheet and consultation record fill in on a tablet at the client meeting, and the service terms, cancellation policy, insurance declaration, feedback form and gift voucher terms rebrand in Word with your planning business name and branding. GDPR notice, marketing consent, complaint procedure and client onboarding match in tone. Two formats from one download - the wedding planner's admin side holds together across the eighteen months between booking and big day itself.

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