MTD for Uber & Deliveroo Drivers
Gig economy workers are treated as self-employed for tax purposes. Your platform earnings count as trading income — and they count in full towards your MTD qualifying income threshold.
🚗 Key points for gig workers
- All platform income (Uber, Deliveroo, Bolt, Stuart) is self-employment income
- Your gross earnings before the platform fee count — not your take-home
- Multiple platforms are combined for threshold purposes
- Expenses (fuel, insurance, phone, vehicle costs) reduce taxable profit but NOT the MTD threshold
- If combined platform gross income exceeds £50,000 you must comply from April 2026
📊 Worked Example — Uber driver
Record keeping requirements
Under MTD, you must keep digital records of all income and expenses. For platform workers, this means: downloading your weekly/monthly earnings statements, recording fuel costs with digital receipts, tracking vehicle usage (business vs personal mileage), and using HMRC-approved software that accepts this data.
Multiple platforms
If you drive for Uber and also do Deliveroo courier work, both income streams are combined. If Uber earns you £30,000 gross and Deliveroo earns £22,000 gross, your combined qualifying income is £52,000 — above the 2026 threshold. Each platform should be tracked as a separate income stream within the same self-employment business (or as separate trades if fundamentally different).
Airbnb and short-term lets
Airbnb income is property income, not self-employment income — a crucial distinction. If you earn £20,000 from Uber (self-employment) and £35,000 from Airbnb (property), you have £20,000 of self-employment income and £35,000 of property income. Combined qualifying total: £55,000 — above the April 2026 threshold. Both sources are subject to MTD.
The Rent a Room Scheme
If you rent a room in your own home on Airbnb (and qualify for the Rent a Room scheme with up to £7,500 exemption), the exempt portion does not count towards your qualifying income. Only amounts above the £7,500 threshold count.
Check your exact MTD obligation
Use our free engine — it handles gig income, multiple platforms, and combined thresholds.
Run My Free MTD Check →MTD for Etsy & eBay Sellers
Selling on digital marketplaces is self-employment income for most sellers — but the rules are nuanced. The £1,000 trading allowance, the distinction between trading and non-trading, and the treatment of platform fees all affect your position.
🛍️ Key points for marketplace sellers
- Selling regularly with profit intent = self-employment income (counts for MTD)
- Occasional sales of personal possessions ≠ trading (does not count)
- The £1,000 trading allowance means the first £1,000 of trading income is tax-free — but all income counts for the MTD threshold
- Platform fees are expenses, not deductions from qualifying income
- Digital Sales Reporting (DSR) rules since Jan 2024 mean HMRC already receives data from platforms about seller earnings
📊 Worked Example — Etsy handmade goods seller
Trading vs. non-trading — the HMRC badges of trade
Occasional sales of personal belongings (old furniture, clothes, collectibles) are generally not trading. Systematic selling with commercial intent is trading. HMRC's "badges of trade" test considers: frequency of sales, profit motive, modification of goods before sale, and whether the activity looks like a business. If in doubt, treat it as trading.
eBay — reselling and arbitrage
Many eBay sellers buy goods specifically to resell at a profit. This is clearly trading income. Your qualifying income for MTD is your total sales revenue, not your profit. A reseller turning over £60,000 but only making £8,000 profit still has £60,000 of qualifying income for MTD threshold purposes.
Vinted and second-hand clothing
Vinted specifically is interesting — casual sellers of their own clothing are generally not trading. But high-volume resellers buying and selling clothing for profit are trading. HMRC has specifically flagged Vinted in its DSR guidance.
MTD for CIS Contractors
CIS sub-contractors face a specific issue: tax is deducted at source by main contractors before you receive payment. This creates potential confusion about what counts as your "income" for MTD purposes. The answer is unambiguous — it's your gross CIS income.
🔨 Key points for CIS sub-contractors
- MTD threshold is based on gross CIS income before deductions
- A 20% or 30% deduction at source does NOT reduce your qualifying income figure
- CIS gross income is self-employment income and counts in full
- Monthly CIS deduction statements from contractors must be kept digitally
- If you are also a main contractor, your contractual payments to sub-contractors are expenses
📊 Worked Example — CIS sub-contractor
CIS software requirements
Your MTD-compliant software must be able to handle CIS-specific reporting. This means recording gross amounts received from each contractor, the deduction certificate details (contractor UTR, deduction amount), and matching deductions to your tax credits on final declaration. Not all software handles this well — Sage and QuickBooks have dedicated CIS modules.
Gross payment status
If you hold CIS gross payment status (no deductions made), your situation is simpler — you receive full payment and pay tax through Self Assessment/MTD quarterly updates. The threshold still applies to your gross income.
Materials — the important distinction
If your CIS invoice includes materials separately invoiced to the contractor, only the labour element is subject to CIS deduction. However, all amounts — labour and materials — count towards your qualifying income for MTD threshold purposes.
| Scenario | Gross Income | CIS Deduction | MTD Qualifying Income |
|---|---|---|---|
| Contractor A (20% deduction) | £40,000 | £8,000 | £40,000 |
| Contractor B (20% deduction) | £18,000 | £3,600 | £18,000 |
| Gross payment status contractor | £15,000 | £0 | £15,000 |
| Total | £73,000 | £11,600 | £73,000 — MANDATORY 2026 |
MTD for Landlords with Foreign Income
Landlords with overseas properties, non-UK resident landlords receiving UK rental income, and UK-resident landlords with foreign business income all face additional complexity in their MTD position.
🌍 Key points for landlords with foreign elements
- UK-resident landlords with overseas property income — this is foreign income and currently treated separately under MTD rules
- Non-resident landlords with UK rental income — MTD applies to UK qualifying income
- Double tax treaty relief does not reduce your UK qualifying income for threshold purposes
- The Non-Resident Landlord (NRL) scheme deductions at source work similarly to CIS — gross counts
- Foreign currency amounts must be converted to sterling at the exchange rate when received
Non-resident landlords — UK rental income
If you live outside the UK but receive UK rental income, you are subject to UK income tax through the Non-Resident Landlord scheme. Your UK property rental income counts towards the MTD threshold. The fact that you are non-resident does not exempt you from MTD — if your UK qualifying income exceeds the threshold, you are subject to MTD for ITSA.
Practical challenges for non-residents
Non-resident landlords face practical complexity: accessing HMRC's online services may require a UK address or agent, and the software requirement assumes UK-based access. HMRC is aware of these challenges. Non-residents in genuine difficulty accessing digital tools may have grounds for a digital exclusion exemption — apply formally with evidence.
Double tax treaties
If you pay tax on UK rental income in both the UK and your country of residence, double tax treaty relief prevents double taxation. However, the relief is applied when calculating your final UK tax liability — it does not reduce your qualifying income for MTD threshold purposes.
Currency conversion
For UK residents with overseas property, income received in foreign currency must be converted to sterling. Use the exchange rate at the date of receipt (or HMRC's average rates for the year if more convenient). Your software should handle this — check before purchasing.
MTD for Couples with Joint Rental Property
Jointly-owned rental property creates individual MTD obligations based on each person's share. The threshold is not shared — each partner is assessed separately on their portion of the rental income.
👫 Key points for joint property owners
- Each co-owner is assessed on their own share of rental income
- Default split for married/civil partners is 50/50 — but can be changed via Form 17
- Each person has their own MTD obligation — one partner may be mandatory, the other not
- Joint ownership does not mean one joint MTD submission — each files separately
- Beneficial interest declarations (Declaration of Trust) can affect the split
📊 Worked Example — Married couple, joint BTL portfolio
Form 17 — beneficial interest declaration
Married couples and civil partners are automatically assessed on a 50/50 split. If you want HMRC to recognise a different split (e.g. 90/10), you must file a Form 17 declaration evidenced by a Declaration of Trust. This can have significant MTD implications — if one partner takes 10% of a large rental income, they may fall below the threshold entirely.
Unmarried couples and cohabiting partners
Non-married owners are assessed on their actual beneficial interest — no automatic 50/50 rule. The split is determined by the legal ownership and any Declaration of Trust. Each owner is responsible for reporting their own share.
When one partner triggers MTD and the other doesn't
It is entirely possible (and common) for one partner to be subject to MTD from April 2026 and the other from April 2027 — or not at all. Each person manages their own MTD obligation independently. There is no provision for one partner to file on behalf of both under MTD ITSA (unlike a joint return in some other tax systems).
Practical tips for joint owners
Choose software that clearly separates income by property — this makes calculating and reporting individual shares straightforward. Keep a clear record of the ownership split and any Declaration of Trust. If you change the split during the year, the timing of that change is important for both MTD reporting and stamp duty land tax purposes.
MTD Approaching & During Retirement
If you're winding down a business, transitioning to pension income, or planning to stop letting properties, understanding exactly when your MTD obligation begins — and ends — is essential planning.
🌅 Key points for those approaching retirement
- Pension income alone never triggers an MTD obligation
- State pension, private pension and annuity income are all excluded from qualifying income
- If you retain even small rental or trading income, check if it exceeds the threshold
- Your MTD obligation ends when your qualifying income drops below the threshold (formally confirmed by HMRC)
- If you cease trading mid-year, you must continue MTD until the end of that tax year
Phased retirement — the tricky middle period
Many people wind down gradually — reducing their trading hours, selling properties one by one, or moving from active to passive roles. During this period, you may cross the threshold in some years and not others. HMRC's rule is that you must comply when you exceed the threshold and can apply to leave when you drop below it — but departure is not automatic.
When does your MTD obligation formally end?
You cannot simply stop submitting quarterly updates when you retire or your income drops below the threshold. You must notify HMRC and receive formal confirmation that your MTD obligation has ended. Until then, you remain legally obliged to comply. Contact HMRC through your online account or through your agent.
Cessation of trade
When you permanently cease trading, you must notify HMRC of the cessation date. For MTD, your final quarter runs up to the date of cessation. You then submit a final Final Declaration. Tax owed on cessation is calculated in the usual way including any overlap relief.
Disposing of rental properties
Selling a rental property mid-way through your portfolio wind-down may create a Capital Gains Tax liability (reported separately). The rental income up to the date of sale counts towards your MTD qualifying income for that year. CGT is not qualifying income and does not affect MTD threshold.
Combining pension and small business income
A common retirement scenario: pension income of £30,000 (excluded) plus small trading or letting income of £12,000. Your qualifying income is only £12,000 — well below any current threshold. No MTD obligation.
MTD After Incorporating Your Business
Moving from sole trader to limited company is one of the most significant changes to your tax position. It also terminates your MTD for Income Tax obligation — and creates entirely different reporting obligations for your company.
🏢 Key points for business incorporation
- On incorporation, you cease to be a sole trader — your personal MTD ITSA obligation ends
- Your limited company pays Corporation Tax, not Income Tax — different regime entirely
- You must file a final Self Assessment return for the period up to the date of incorporation
- If you also retain rental property in your own name, that rental income may still trigger MTD
- If you receive a salary and/or dividends from your company, these are PAYE/dividend income — excluded from MTD qualifying income
The incorporation transition — timing matters
If you incorporate on, say, 1 October 2026, you were a sole trader subject to MTD from 6 April 2026. You must have filed your Q1 update (April–June) and possibly Q2 update (July–September) before incorporation. Your Q3 and Q4 are no longer required as your sole trader income ceased on 30 September. You file your Final Declaration for the period 6 April to 30 September.
Overlap relief
If your old accounting period did not run April to April, you may have overlap profits from the pre-2024 basis period reform. Incorporation is a natural trigger to review and claim any outstanding overlap relief — discuss with your accountant.
Retaining property income after incorporation
Many business owners incorporate their trading but retain rental properties in their personal name. If your rental income exceeds the MTD threshold, you remain subject to MTD ITSA for that property income — even though your trading income has moved to the company. The MTD obligation continues for the rental income stream.
Personal service companies and IR35
If you operate through a personal service company (PSC) and are inside IR35, your company income is treated as deemed employment income for tax purposes. This has specific implications for how your income is categorised — seek specialist advice on how this interacts with MTD.
Planning to incorporate?
Use our engine to check your current MTD position and plan your transition timing.
Check My MTD Position →MTD & Furnished Holiday Lets 2026
The government abolished the Furnished Holiday Let (FHL) tax regime with effect from 6 April 2025. This is one of the most significant recent changes affecting property landlords — and it has direct consequences for your MTD obligations.
🏖️ Key points for FHL owners (post-April 2025)
- FHLs lost all special tax status from 6 April 2025
- FHL income is now ordinary UK property income for all purposes
- FHL income NOW counts towards your MTD qualifying income threshold
- You can no longer claim Capital Gains relief, holdover relief or BADR specific to FHLs
- Mortgage interest is now subject to the 20% basic rate relief cap (same as standard BTL)
- The FHL availability and occupancy conditions no longer apply
📊 Worked Example — FHL owner pre and post April 2025
Impact on the MTD threshold for FHL owners
For FHL owners who also had standard buy-to-let income, the merging of income types means their combined property income may now push them above the £50,000 threshold for the first time — specifically because of the April 2025 FHL rule change. This is particularly relevant for those who were planning their tax affairs under the old regime.
Capital Gains Tax — the loss of reliefs
Previously, FHL properties could qualify for Business Asset Disposal Relief (BADR, formerly Entrepreneurs' Relief) reducing CGT to 10%. They could also benefit from holdover relief and rollover relief. These CGT advantages have been removed. FHL properties sold after 6 April 2025 are treated as residential investment property for CGT purposes.
Transition rules — carried forward losses
FHL losses arising before 6 April 2025 can still be used to offset future income from what was previously your FHL business, but now within the general property income pool. Transitional rules require careful attention — work with an accountant to ensure pre-April 2025 losses are correctly carried forward.
Occupancy and availability conditions
The old FHL conditions (available for rent 210+ days, actually let 105+ days) no longer apply. Your property is simply a rental property. You can let it for any period without affecting its tax treatment.