Incorporation · Decision Guide · Updated June 2026 ✓ HMRC-sourced

Should You Switch to a Limited Company
Just to Avoid MTD?

📅 19 June 2026 ⏱ 9 min read Editorial policy ↗ 📋 HMRC MTD guidance ↗

Every year, thousands of UK sole traders ask their accountant the same question when a new tax rule arrives: "should I just go limited?" With MTD, the question has a genuine, factual answer — incorporating does take you out of MTD ITSA scope. But whether it's worth it is a completely different question, and the honest answer is: usually not, if MTD avoidance is your only reason.

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The short version: MTD for Income Tax applies to individuals with personal self-employment or rental income. A limited company is a separate legal entity — its income is the company's, not yours personally. So yes, incorporating removes that income from MTD ITSA scope. But the costs of running a limited company properly usually exceed what you would have spent on MTD software in the first place.

Does Incorporating Actually Avoid MTD?

Yes — factually, this works. Here's exactly why:

So in pure technical terms: incorporate, and your trading income is no longer subject to MTD ITSA. This is accurate. The problem is what people overlook next.

The Real Cost of Incorporating — Beyond MTD

MTD software costs roughly £150–£300 per year for most sole traders (see our full software comparison — and Zoho Books offers a genuinely free tier for income under £35,000). Compare that to the ongoing costs of running a limited company properly:

CostTypical Annual Range
Annual accounts + Corporation Tax return (accountant fee)£500–£1,200
Payroll administration (if taking a salary)£150–£350
Companies House confirmation statement£34 (filing fee)
Dividend voucher / shareholder paperworkOften included in accountant fee
Increased general accountancy complexity£200–£600 extra vs sole trader accounts
Typical total additional cost vs sole trader£900–£2,200+ per year
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The maths usually doesn't work for MTD avoidance alone. Spending £1,000–£2,000+ per year in extra accountancy and admin costs to avoid £150–£300 of MTD software costs is, in almost every case, a losing trade — unless incorporation also genuinely benefits you for other tax reasons.

Sole Trader vs Limited Company — Side by Side

🧾 Staying a Sole Trader
Subject to MTD if above threshold
Simple admin — one tax return type
Lower accountancy costs
All profit is yours, taxed as income
No Companies House filing
Easier to wind down or stop trading
No separation between you and the business legally
🏢 Limited Company
Personal income (salary/dividends) excluded from MTD
More complex admin — Corporation Tax, payroll, Companies House
Higher accountancy costs
Can be tax-efficient at higher profit levels (often £40k+)
Limited liability protection — separates personal and business assets
Harder and more costly to unwind
More credibility with some clients/contracts

When Incorporation Genuinely Makes Sense

Incorporating is a legitimate and often smart decision — but the reasons should stand on their own, independent of MTD:

The right test: Would you incorporate even if MTD did not exist? If the answer is yes — your profit level, liability concerns, or business structure genuinely justify it — then incorporating is a good decision, and avoiding MTD ITSA is simply a welcome side effect. If the only reason on your list is "to avoid MTD," that is a sign the decision needs more thought.

Can You Switch Back?

Yes, but it is not simple. Closing a limited company involves formally striking it off at Companies House or going through a Members' Voluntary Liquidation if there are significant retained funds, and can trigger Capital Gains Tax on value extracted from the company. This is not something to do casually as a temporary MTD workaround — once incorporated, reversing the decision has real cost and complexity.

Incorporating Is Not an MTD Exemption — It's a Structural Change

It is worth being precise about language here. Incorporating does not give you an "MTD exemption" — exemptions are a specific category covered in our MTD exemptions guide, for disability, age, religious belief, and similar grounds, granted by HMRC application. Incorporating is a different thing entirely: it restructures your business so that the income in question is no longer personally yours, and therefore simply falls outside MTD ITSA's scope by definition — not by exemption.

Get Proper Advice Before Deciding

This is one of the genuinely high-stakes decisions in small business tax planning. The right call depends on your specific profit level, your industry, your plans for the business, your personal financial situation, and current tax rates — all of which change. A qualified accountant who knows your full picture can run the actual numbers for your situation. This guide gives you the framework to ask the right questions — it is not a substitute for that conversation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, in the sense that MTD for Income Tax applies only to individuals with self-employment or personal rental income, not to limited companies. A limited company files Corporation Tax returns instead, and MTD for Corporation Tax was confirmed cancelled by HMRC in late 2025. So incorporating does remove you from MTD ITSA scope for that income.
Usually not, if avoiding MTD is the only reason. MTD compliance costs roughly £150–£300 per year for software. Incorporating costs significantly more in accountancy fees, Corporation Tax compliance, payroll administration, and potential loss of certain reliefs — often £1,000–£2,000+ per year in additional costs. Incorporation should be driven by genuine tax efficiency or business reasons, not solely MTD avoidance.
Typical additional costs of running a limited company versus a sole trade include £500–£1,200 per year for annual accounts and Corporation Tax return preparation, £150–£350 for payroll if you take a salary, Companies House filing requirements, and potentially higher accountancy fees overall. Many small business owners find these costs exceed any savings unless their profit level is high enough to benefit from the tax efficiency of dividends.
As a general guide, many accountants suggest incorporation becomes worth considering once profits regularly exceed roughly £40,000–£50,000 per year, where the combination of Corporation Tax and dividend tax can be lower than Income Tax and National Insurance as a sole trader. This varies significantly based on individual circumstances and changes to tax rates, so professional advice is essential before deciding.
Yes, but it involves formally closing the company (through striking off or members' voluntary liquidation), which has its own costs and tax implications, including potential Capital Gains Tax on any value extracted. It is not a simple reversal, so the decision to incorporate should not be made lightly or purely as a temporary MTD workaround.

First — Check If You Actually Need to Worry About MTD

Many people considering incorporation overestimate their exposure. Run our free calculator first — you might be further from the threshold than you think.

Check My MTD Position →

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