Self Assessment tax return accountant London
Self Assessment tax returns prepared with the tax position properly reviewed.
Tax Accountant London prepares Self Assessment tax returns for individuals, landlords, company directors, high earners, self-employed clients, investors, foreign income clients, non-residents and taxpayers who need HMRC-ready reporting rather than basic form filling.
A correct tax return should consider income, gains, allowances, reliefs, tax deducted, payments on account, supplementary pages, HMRC notices, prior-year figures and whether the return creates a future compliance risk.
Income, gains and required schedules reviewed before the Self Assessment tax return is filed.
Balancing payment, payments on account, tax deducted, reliefs and HMRC calculations checked.
Records, tax years, notices, amendments, penalties and enquiry risk considered before submission.
Tax return accountant London
A Self Assessment tax return should report the full tax position for the year.
Self Assessment is the HMRC system used to report income, gains and tax charges that are not fully dealt with through PAYE. A tax return may be needed for rental income, self-employment, dividends, foreign income, capital gains, high income child benefit charge, director income, partnership income, pension issues or HMRC notices to file.
A Self Assessment accountant should check the correct supplementary pages, tax deducted, reliefs, payments on account and whether earlier years or future compliance need attention. The aim is to file a return that is accurate, supported by records and clear enough if HMRC later asks questions.
Who needs Self Assessment support
Tax return support for individuals, landlords, directors, high earners and internationally connected clients.
Self Assessment becomes more technical when the return includes several income sources, property income, foreign income, capital gains, residence pages, high income charges or HMRC penalties.
Company directors and shareholders
Salary, dividends, benefits, director loans, company income extraction and personal tax return reporting.
Landlords and property owners
Rental income, SA105 property pages, mortgage interest relief, joint ownership, losses and MTD readiness.
Self-employed and consultants
Trading income, allowable expenses, basis period issues, Class 4 National Insurance and payments on account.
Foreign income and capital gains clients
SA106 foreign pages, SA108 capital gains pages, foreign tax credit relief, CGT reporting and evidence review.
Self Assessment services
Choose the route by income type, tax year, HMRC notice and records available.
A simple tax return may only need employment income and small additional income. A more detailed return may require property pages, foreign income pages, capital gains pages, residence pages, partnership pages, disclosure review or amendment of earlier years.
SA100 accountant London
The SA100 should bring together income, gains, reliefs and tax already paid.
The main Self Assessment tax return is the starting point, but it may not be enough on its own. Supplementary pages may be needed depending on the income, gains, residence status and tax charges involved.
P60s, P45s, P11Ds, pension statements, tax deducted and PAYE coding issues reviewed before filing.
Dividend vouchers, bank interest, investment statements and tax deducted checked against allowance rules.
Turnover, allowable expenses, business records, Class 4 NIC, losses and payments on account reviewed.
Adjusted net income, child benefit received, pension contributions and charge calculation reviewed.
Pension contributions, gift aid, professional subscriptions, losses and other claims checked against records.
Tax deducted, PAYE underpayments, overpayments, student loan deductions and repayment claims reviewed.
Self Assessment supplementary pages
The correct supplementary pages are often where tax return mistakes happen.
A Self Assessment tax return may need more than the main SA100. If the wrong pages are missed, the return may look complete but still fail to report the full tax position.
Used for UK rental income, property expenses, mortgage interest relief, property losses and landlord reporting.
Used for foreign income, overseas tax paid, foreign rental income, foreign pensions and foreign tax credit relief.
Used for capital gains, losses, property disposals, investments, cryptoassets and CGT reliefs.
Used for residence, non-residence, split-year treatment, personal allowance claims and internationally mobile clients.
Used for sole trader income, business expenses, capital allowances, losses and Class 4 National Insurance.
Used where partnership profits, losses, drawings or partnership statements need to be reported personally.
Areas normal tax return filing often misses
Self Assessment needs judgement where the facts are not straightforward.
Many tax return errors come from treating the return as data entry. The important work is often deciding what the figures mean, whether they are taxable, where they belong and whether the evidence supports the claim.
Foreign income, split-year treatment, SA109 pages and double tax relief need careful review before filing.
Property disposals may already have been reported separately, but the gain may still need Self Assessment reconciliation.
Directors should align company records, dividends, salary, benefits and personal tax reporting.
Payments on account should only be reduced where there is a reasonable basis to expect a lower tax bill.
Where HMRC was not told about a tax liability, penalties may depend on behaviour, timing and tax unpaid.
Qualifying income, digital records, software and quarterly reporting should be reviewed before MTD starts.
Payments on account
Self Assessment tax bills often include next year’s tax in advance.
Payments on account can surprise clients because the January bill may include the balancing payment for the year just ended and the first payment towards the following tax year. The second payment on account is normally due by 31 July.
Any remaining tax due for the previous tax year is usually payable by 31 January after the tax year ends.
The first payment on account towards the next tax year is usually also due on 31 January.
The second payment on account is usually due by 31 July, unless the payments have been reduced or are not required.
Reduction claims should be supported by a realistic estimate of the current year’s income and tax position.
Making Tax Digital for Income Tax
Landlords and sole traders should prepare for digital records and quarterly updates.
Making Tax Digital for Income Tax is being phased in for Self Assessment taxpayers with qualifying income from self-employment or property. The change affects record keeping, software, quarterly updates and year-end finalisation.
MTD applies to relevant sole traders and landlords with qualifying income over £50,000.
The threshold reduces to qualifying income over £30,000.
The threshold reduces to qualifying income over £20,000.
Self-employed clients and landlords should organise income and expenses digitally before quarterly reporting begins.
Late tax returns, amendments and HMRC enquiries
HMRC tax return problems should be reviewed before a response is sent.
HMRC may issue late filing penalties, payment penalties, failure to notify penalties, discovery assessments, information requests or tax return enquiries. The correct response depends on the deadline, tax year, behaviour, records and whether the original return was incomplete.
Records needed for Self Assessment
Tax return records should be organised by tax year and income source.
P60, P45, P11D, payslips, dividend vouchers, director loan details and company income records.
Rental statements, expense invoices, mortgage interest, bank statements, sales invoices and business costs.
Foreign tax certificates, overseas statements, exchange rates, portfolio reports, CGT calculations and crypto data.
UTR, Government Gateway access, HMRC notices, payments on account, prior returns, penalty notices and coding letters.
Self Assessment process
A structured route from records to filing and payment review.
We identify the tax year, UTR status, income sources, gains, HMRC notices and filing deadline.
We review documents and decide which supplementary pages and calculations are needed.
We prepare the SA100, supplementary pages, tax calculation, payments on account and repayment position.
We file the agreed return and confirm payment deadlines, records to retain and any future compliance points.
Self Assessment tax return fees
Fees depend on income sources, records, supplementary pages and HMRC risk.
We quote before work starts. A simple Self Assessment return is different from a return with property income, foreign pages, capital gains, residence issues, historic omissions or HMRC correspondence.
For one or two straightforward income sources with clean records.
For directors, landlords, high earners or clients with several income sources.
For foreign income, residence, CGT, disclosure, late returns, HMRC letters or complex records.
Self Assessment Tax Return FAQs
Common questions about Self Assessment, SA100, supplementary pages, deadlines, payments and HMRC penalties.
Who needs to file a Self Assessment tax return?
You may need to file a Self Assessment tax return if you have income or gains not fully taxed through PAYE, including self-employment, rental income, dividends, foreign income, capital gains, partnership income or certain tax charges.
What is an SA100 tax return?
The SA100 is the main Self Assessment tax return. It reports personal income, tax reliefs, deductions and tax calculation information. Supplementary pages may also be needed depending on your circumstances.
What are Self Assessment supplementary pages?
Supplementary pages are additional sections used for specific income or tax issues, such as SA105 for UK property, SA106 for foreign income, SA108 for capital gains and SA109 for residence.
When is the Self Assessment deadline?
The online filing deadline is usually 31 January after the end of the tax year. The paper return deadline is usually 31 October. If you need to register for Self Assessment, the registration deadline is usually 5 October after the tax year.
When do I pay my Self Assessment tax bill?
The balancing payment is usually due by 31 January after the tax year. If payments on account apply, the first payment is also due by 31 January and the second payment is usually due by 31 July.
Can I reduce payments on account?
You can ask to reduce payments on account if you reasonably expect the current year tax bill to be lower. Reducing them too far can lead to interest if the final tax bill is higher than expected.
What if I missed the Self Assessment deadline?
Late filing and late payment can lead to penalties and interest. The return should still be prepared as soon as possible, and any reasonable excuse or appeal position should be reviewed separately.
Do landlords need Self Assessment?
Landlords usually need Self Assessment where rental income is taxable and not fully dealt with elsewhere. UK property income is normally reported using the SA105 property pages.
Do I need to report foreign income on a UK tax return?
UK residents usually need to consider worldwide income and gains. Foreign income may need SA106 foreign pages and a foreign tax credit relief calculation if tax was paid overseas.
What is Making Tax Digital for Self Assessment?
Making Tax Digital for Income Tax is being phased in for sole traders and landlords with qualifying income above the relevant threshold. It will require digital records and digital reporting through compatible software.