Childminders · Home Childcare · Updated June 2026 ✓ HMRC-sourced

MTD for Childminders —
What Happens to Your Wear and Tear Allowance

📅 19 June 2026 ⏱ 7 min read Editorial policy ↗ 📋 HMRC eligibility guidance ↗
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If you are a registered childminder, you are self-employed for tax purposes — and that means Making Tax Digital applies to you in exactly the same way it applies to any other sole trader. But there is one change specific to childminders that genuinely matters more than the general MTD rules: the future of the wear and tear allowance.

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The headline issue: Many childminders have relied on the simplified 10% wear and tear allowance to cover the extra damage that childcare causes to their home — scuffed walls, worn carpets, stained sofas, broken furniture. Under MTD's move to itemised, digitally-tracked expenses, this flat allowance is being phased out in favour of claiming actual costs. For some childminders this means more paperwork. For others, it could mean a bigger claim — if you track it properly.

Are You Affected by MTD as a Childminder?

Yes, if your gross childminding income (plus any other self-employment or rental income) exceeds the relevant threshold:

Tax Year AssessedThresholdMTD Start Date
2024–25Over £50,0006 April 2026 — mandatory now
2025–26Over £30,0006 April 2027
2026–27Over £20,0006 April 2028

Your gross income is your total fees received before expenses — not your take-home profit. A childminder charging £5 per hour per child, looking after three children full-time, can reach £45,000–£55,000 gross relatively easily once you account for a full school year of bookings.

The Wear and Tear Allowance — What's Changing

Under the old system, many childminders claimed a flat 10% wear and tear allowance to account for the additional damage children cause to a home used for business — without needing to itemise every individual cost. This was simple, but it didn't always reflect the real cost, especially for childminders with multiple children or who run a particularly busy setting.

Under MTD's digital, continuous record-keeping model, HMRC is moving towards itemised expense claims rather than flat allowances. This means childminders will generally need to:

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The silver lining: If your home genuinely suffers significant wear from childcare — and many childminding settings do — itemised claims based on actual costs can sometimes result in a higher deduction than the old 10% flat rate. The trade-off is administrative: you need to keep receipts and records throughout the year rather than applying a simple percentage at year-end. MTD-compatible software with receipt photo capture makes this far less burdensome than it sounds.

What You Can Still Claim as a Childminder

The end of the simplified wear and tear allowance does not mean you lose all your deductions. Standard allowable expenses for childminders remain fully claimable under MTD:

Expense CategoryExamples
Food and drinkMeals and snacks provided to minded children
Toys and equipmentToys, books, outdoor play equipment, stair gates, high chairs
OutingsEntry fees, travel costs for trips with minded children
Use of homeProportion of utility bills, council tax, mortgage interest, or HMRC's simplified flat rate
InsurancePublic liability insurance — a legal requirement for registered childminders
TrainingOfsted-required training, first aid courses, qualification renewals
Replacement and repair costsFurniture, carpets, decorating — itemised, with receipts, instead of the flat wear and tear rate

The Simplified Expenses Flat Rate for Use of Home — Still Available

It is worth being clear about a common point of confusion: the wear and tear allowance change is separate from HMRC's simplified expenses flat rate for use of home, which is based on the hours you work from home each month. This use-of-home flat rate remains available under MTD and is unaffected by the wear and tear changes. Many childminders will continue using it alongside itemised claims for wear and tear and equipment costs.

What Quarterly Updates Look Like for a Childminder

If you are above the threshold, your MTD quarterly updates will report your childminding income and expenses in the same standard self-employment categories used by any sole trader — turnover, cost of goods/materials, and other allowable expenses. Your software categorises food, toys, outings, insurance, training, and use-of-home costs under the relevant standard expense headings. There is no special "childminder" category in HMRC's system — your business is treated as a standard self-employment trade.

Ofsted Registration and MTD — Two Separate Systems

Your Ofsted registration as a childminder and your MTD tax obligations are entirely separate systems with no overlap. Being Ofsted-registered does not affect your MTD threshold or obligations — what matters for MTD purposes is purely your gross self-employment income. Equally, MTD compliance has no bearing on your Ofsted registration status.

Frequently Asked Questions

The 10% wear and tear allowance that many childminders used is being phased out under MTD's move to digital, itemised expense tracking. Instead, childminders can claim actual costs of replacing and repairing items used for childminding, and capital allowances on larger equipment purchases — which can mean a higher claim if your home suffers significant wear from childcare use, but requires keeping receipts and records throughout the year.
Childminders are self-employed sole traders for tax purposes, so the same MTD thresholds apply: over £50,000 gross income in 2024–25 means MTD from April 2026, over £30,000 in 2025–26 means April 2027, over £20,000 in 2026–27 means April 2028.
Your gross income is your total childminding fees received before any expenses — food, toys, outings, insurance, training, use-of-home costs. This is the figure used to determine your MTD threshold, not your take-home profit after expenses.
Yes. HMRC's simplified expenses flat rate for use of home (based on hours worked from home) remains available under MTD and is unaffected by the wear and tear allowance changes. Many childminders use this alongside itemised claims for other costs.
No. Any HMRC-approved MTD software works for childminders. There is no childminder-specific software requirement — the key need is good categorisation of food, toys, outings, insurance, training and use-of-home costs, which standard MTD software handles.

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