Taxi Drivers · Private Hire · Minicabs · Updated July 2026 ✓ HMRC-sourced

MTD for Taxi and Private Hire Drivers —
Cash, Card and App: What Actually Counts

6 July 2026 ⏱ 8 min read Editorial policy ↗ HMRC eligibility guidance ↗
⚡ Check Your Driving Income Position
Do your total fares trigger MTD?
Cash + card fares (street hails, account work)
£
App-based fares (Uber, Bolt, FreeNow)
£
Other self-employment / property income
£

Use gross fares. before any commission, radio circuit fees, or platform fees are deducted.

If you drive a black cab, a private hire vehicle, or a minicab for a local firm, you're self-employed for tax purposes in exactly the same way as any other sole trader. and Making Tax Digital applies to you on the same gross-income basis. What's different about taxi and private hire work is how many separate income streams a typical week can involve: street hails paid in cash, card readers, account work invoiced monthly, radio circuit bookings, and increasingly, app-based platforms like Uber, Bolt or FreeNow layered on top.

None of that complexity changes the rule. Every fare, however it was paid and however it was booked, counts towards your MTD qualifying income. This guide walks through exactly how to add it all up, what you can claim back, and what your quarterly reporting will actually look like.

Your MTD Threshold as a Taxi or Private Hire Driver

Tax Year AssessedThresholdMTD Start Date
2024–25Over £50,0006 April 2026. Live since April 2026
2025–26Over £30,0006 April 2027
2026–27Over £20,0006 April 2028

Over 860,000 self-employed drivers and sole traders were caught by the April 2026 rollout alone, and taxi and private hire drivers make up a significant share of that number. HMRC began writing directly to affected drivers from May 2025 based on 2024/25 Self Assessment figures. if you earned over £50,000 gross that year, you should already be using MTD-compatible software.

Every Income Stream Adds Up, No Exceptions

Combine everything before checking your threshold. A driver taking street hails, doing occasional account work for a local business, and picking up Uber trips in quiet periods must add all three together. It's one MTD threshold per person, not one per income stream or one per platform.

Whether you receive a fare through a taxi meter, a card machine in the vehicle, a monthly account invoice, or an app that deposits your share weekly, HMRC treats it identically: it's gross self-employment income, and it counts in full. This includes:

If you drive exclusively through an app platform and want more detail specific to that setup, see our dedicated MTD for Uber and Deliveroo guide. this page focuses on the fuller mix of income that most taxi and private hire drivers actually deal with.

Worked Examples

Example 1. Full-time black cab driver
Street hail and rank fares (cash + card)£46,000
Account and corporate work£9,200
MTD qualifying income (gross)£55,200
Vehicle, fuel, insurance, licensing (expenses)−£19,400 (expense)
Taxable profit£35,800
Mandatory — Live Now. gross income exceeds £50,000 threshold
Example 2. Part-time minicab driver using an app
Radio circuit bookings (gross)£14,000
Uber app fares (gross, before service fee)£11,500
MTD qualifying income (combined gross)£25,500
Below April 2026 and April 2027 thresholds. mandatory from April 2028 (£20k threshold)

What You Can Claim as a Taxi or Private Hire Driver

Expense CategoryExamples
Vehicle running costsFuel, servicing, MOT, repairs, tyres. or the simplified mileage rate instead
InsuranceHire and reward (taxi/PH-specific) insurance, essential and fully allowable
Licensing and platingCouncil PH licence, driver badge, vehicle plate renewal fees
Radio circuit / dispatch feesWeekly or monthly circuit membership charged by the firm
Platform commissionThe service fee Uber, Bolt or FreeNow deduct before paying you
Vehicle finance or lease costsIf the vehicle is financed or leased specifically for the business
Cleaning and valetingKeeping the vehicle presentable for passengers
Admin costsMobile phone data (business proportion), accounting software

Mileage Rate or Actual Costs?

For a vehicle used for hire, HMRC lets you choose between two methods, and it's worth comparing both in your first year under MTD:

Once you choose actual costs for a vehicle, you generally need to stick with that method for as long as you use that vehicle in the business. so it's worth doing the sums properly before deciding, ideally with your first quarter's real numbers rather than guesswork.

Practical Digital Records for Drivers

The realistic challenge for most drivers isn't understanding the rule, it's capturing everything from several different sources consistently. What works well in practice:

Best MTD Software for Drivers

Software links are affiliate. help fund CheckMyMTD. Recommendations based on suitability for mobile, on-the-road record keeping.

MTD Quarterly Deadlines for Drivers

QuarterPeriodDeadline2026–27 Soft Landing
Q16 Apr – 5 Jul 20267 Aug 2026No points if late
Q26 Jul – 5 Oct 20267 Nov 2026No points if late
Q36 Oct 2026 – 5 Jan 20277 Feb 2027No points if late
Q46 Jan – 5 Apr 20277 May 2027No points if late
Final DeclarationFull year 2026–2731 Jan 2028Not soft-landed

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Every fare counts towards your MTD qualifying income regardless of how the passenger paid you. cash in hand, card reader, contactless, or through an app like Uber or Bolt. There is no separate or lower-scrutiny category for cash jobs, and HMRC's digital record-keeping requirement under MTD makes inconsistent records considerably easier to spot than under the old annual return.
Yes. Your MTD qualifying income is your total gross self-employment income from all driving sources combined. radio circuit bookings, account work, street hails, and app-based platforms like Uber or Bolt. These are added together to determine your threshold and phase, not assessed separately.
Yes. Taxi and private hire licence fees, badge renewal costs, and vehicle plating fees are allowable business expenses. They reduce your taxable profit but do not reduce your MTD qualifying income, which is assessed on gross fares before any expenses are deducted.
Yes, if you are a sole trader you can use HMRC's simplified mileage rate (45p per mile for the first 10,000 business miles, then 25p per mile) instead of tracking fuel, insurance, servicing and depreciation separately. Many drivers find actual costs claim more once vehicle-for-hire running costs are factored in, so it is worth comparing both methods for your first year under MTD.
Your PAYE salary does not count towards the MTD threshold at all. Only your gross self-employed driving income counts. A driver earning £32,000 PAYE plus £18,000 gross from part-time private hire work has qualifying income of only £18,000, below all current MTD thresholds.

Check Your Full MTD Position

Our free calculator checks your exact threshold, gives you your deadlines, and recommends mobile-friendly software for on-the-road record keeping.

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