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UK Tax Deadlines 2026: The Complete HMRC Compliance Calendar for UK Businesses

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UK Tax Deadlines
Covers Self Assessment, Corporation Tax, VAT, PAYE, MTD ITSA, and Companies House

Don’t worry, if you miss a tax deadline, it doesn’t mean you’re a bad business owner. It typically indicates that you were not told there are six different deadlines, each with its own deadline and penalty, and that they are unrelated to one another.

This is the actual issue. Businesses in the UK do not miss deadlines as they are disorganisation. They miss it because the system is complicated and most guides cover only one aspect at a time. You complete your quarterly VAT return on time and feel you are compliant — only to get a penalty notice because your corporation tax was due 3 months before your CT600 was submitted — and nobody said that.

This guide addresses that. It brings together all HMRC and Companies House duties for 2026 – clear dates, clear penalties and a practical system with no missed steps.

2026 is more important than most years for UK HMRC tax deadlines. Making Tax Digital for Income Tax has now been rolled out for everyone earning more than £50,000 a year. CT600 fixed penalties doubled in April. Aside from compliance, HMRC’s late payment interest rate is 7.75% per annum, which is the real cost of unpaid tax. If you don’t already have a tax calendar for your business to check HMRC filing deadlines, then it’s time to create one.

The One Thing Most Guides Get Wrong

They treat each tax as a separate topic. In reality, your responsibilities overlap. 

  • The Corporation tax payment deadline is on 1st January.
  • PAYE Due on the 19th/22nd of each month.
  • Pay VAT return 7 May.
  • The CT600 returns will be due 31 March, 2026 (three months after the payment).

Missed the payment in January whilst waiting for the accountant to draw up accounts in March, and HMRC has been applying 7.75% interest, which is daily throughout. No notification has been sent to you.

It is not a coincidence. This is what the system of things was set up to do.

Complete UK Tax Deadline Calendar 2026

May 2026 figures from HMRC gov.uk. The dates for paying CT600 and the corporation tax deadline in the UK differ depending on the accounting period end. Please check with a qualified accountant for your dates. Here is the UK tax deadlines calendar. 

Source: HMRC gov.uk, May 2026. CT600 and corporation tax payment dates vary by accounting period end. Verify with a qualified accountant for your specific dates.
Obligation DeadlineWho It Applies To Penalty Risk
Self Assessment (Paper)31 October, 2026 Individuals, sole traders, directors£100 automatic
Self Assessment — Online31 January 2027 (midnight)Individuals, sole traders, directors£100 + £10/day after 3 months
Balancing Payment (2025/26)31 January 2027Individuals, sole traders, directors7.75% p.a. interest from 1 Feb
2nd Payment on Account31 July 2026Self-assessment taxpayersInterest from 1 August
Corporation Tax Payment9 months + 1 day after period endAll limited companies (inc. dormant)7.75% p.a. daily interest
Companies House Accounts12 months after period endUK limited companies£200 day-one penalty
VAT Return — Q1 (Jan–Mar)7 May 2026VAT-registered businesses£150–£1,500 fine
VAT Return — Q2 (Apr–Jun)7 August 2026VAT-registered businessesPenalty points → £200
VAT Return — Q3 (Jul–Sep)7 November 2026VAT-registered businessesPenalty points accumulate
VAT Return — Q4 (Oct–Dec)7 February 2027VAT-registered businesses1–4% of late amount
PAYE & NIC — Electronic22nd of the following monthAll UK employers£300 per form, £60/day
PAYE & NIC — Postal19th of the following monthAll UK employers£300 per employee
P11D — Benefits in Kind6 July 2026Employers with benefitsPoints-based penalty
P60 — Year-End Certificate31 May 2026All employersEmployer compliance action 
MTD ITSA — Q1 Update5 August 2026Self-employed/landlords >£50k incomePoints-based penalty
Capital Gains (Property)60 days from completionProperty sellersAutomatic penalty + interest

Self Assessment 2026: Who Must File and What’s Actually Due

Do you need to file?

You must file a Self Assessment return for 2025/26 if you were any of the following:

  • uncheckedSelf-employed and earning more than £1,000 a year.
  • uncheckedA director of a company, whether all the income is received through PAYE or not.
  • uncheckedA landlord whose rental income is more than £2,500 a year.
  • uncheckedA person who earns more than £100,000 a year.
  • uncheckedA taxpayer whose investment income was more than or in addition to their regular income.
  • uncheckedSubject to High Income Child Benefit Charge (income over £60,000)
  • uncheckedIf the foreign income is not taxed, it is considered to be in receipt of untaxed foreign income. 

Not yet registered? The deadline to notify HMRC of your obligation for 2025/26 is 5 October 2026. Missing it adds a failure-to-notify penalty on top of any late filing penalty.

→ Register for Self Assessment: https://www.gov.uk/log-in-file-self-assessment-tax-return/register-if-youre-self-employed

The January problem nobody explains

The 31 January 2027 is not a single deadline. It’s three all due at once:

  • Make your online return for 2025/26.
  • Pay your 2025/26 balancing payment
  • Make the first instalment for 2026/27.

That’s the third one that trips people up. A sole trader owing £8,000 for 2025/26 also owes £4,000 as a first payment on account — a total January outgoing of £12,000. This cash demand cannot be reduced — both amounts are legally due on the same date. 

Best practice: set aside 25–30% of net profit every month — not just in January. 

Payments on account

Required when your Self Assessment bill exceeds more than £1,000 and if it gets less than 80% is collected through PAYE. Each payment is 50% of the previous year’s net liability.

  • Second payment on account: It is on 31 July 2026
  • If your income has fallen, apply to reduce payments on account proactively. If HMRC finds the reduction was excessive, interest applies retrospectively.

→ Reduce your payments on account: https://www.gov.uk/understand-self-assessment-bill/payments-on-account

Penalty structure — Self Assessment

Trigger Penalty 
1 Day Late £100 automatic (even with no tax owed)
3 Months Late£10/day for up to 90 days (max £900)
6 Months Late5% of outstanding tax or £300, whichever is higher
12 Months Late Further 5% or £300; deliberate cases up to 100% of tax due
Checklist: What to gather before filing

uncheckedP60 from all employments 
uncheckedSelf-employment income and expenses 
uncheckedRental income statements 
uncheckedBank interest and dividend certificates
uncheckedGift Aid records
uncheckedCapital gains disposals  
uncheckedPrior year return 
uncheckedStudent loan details  
uncheckedForeign income  
uncheckedPension contributions

Corporation Tax 2026: The Two-Deadline Trap

This is the single most expensive misunderstanding in UK business tax.

Corporation tax has two completely independent deadlines. Most directors treat them as one.

Obligation FormulaExample: 31 March 2025 Year-End
Payment 9 months + 1 day after period end
1 January 
CT 600 Filing12 months after period end
31 March 2026
Company House Accounts 9 months after year-end
31 December 2025

You must pay three months before you file. This means you would need to estimate your liability based on draft accounts and pay it before the final numbers are ready.

What does this cost in practice?

A company has an end of year on 30 September 2025 and is due £35,000 corporation tax. The CT600 is due 30 September 2026. The payment closing date was 1st July 2026.

This is when the director awaits the accountant—accounts come out in August. By then, a month’s interest on £35,000 at 7.75% will have been about £234 – avoidable charges. The fact that the accounts are ‘nearly ready’ is irrelevant to HMRC. 

CT600 penalties from April 2026

HMRC doubled fixed penalties for the first time since the late 1990s:

Trigger Penalty 
Day 1 late £200 (was £100)
3 months lateFurther £200 (total £400; repeat offenders up to £1,000)
6 months late10% surcharge on unpaid tax
12 months lateFurther 10% Surcharge 

On a £50,000 liability, cumulative penalties can exceed £10,400 before interest. On a £0 liability: still £200 on day one.

The dormant company trap

Many directors believe that if their company is dormant, there is no CT600 liability. This is wrong.

A CT600 is a document that must be sent to HMRC by all UK limited companies, even those that have no income and no tax to pay. It takes only a few minutes to file a dormant CT600. Failure to file results in a £200 penalty on day one, with further penalties if it remains outstanding. 

→ File a CT600 online: https://www.gov.uk/file-your-company-accounts-and-tax-return

Companies House vs HMRC — not the same filing

These are separate obligations, filed to separate portals, under separate penalty regimes:

The Companies House filing deadline is different from HMRC; not filing one will not meet the other. 

VAT Deadlines and MTD Compliance 2026

2026 quarterly deadlines

QuarterPeriod EndSubmission Deadline
Q131 March 20267 May 2026
Q230 June 20267 August 2026
Q330 September 20267 November 2026
Q431 December 20267 February 2027

Non-standard VAT periods (monthly, annual) have different dates. Check yours at: https://www.gov.uk/vat-returns/deadlines

The digital link rule — where most businesses fail

The Making Tax Digital VAT deadlines have been in place since 2022. Accounting software is not the only thing required.

MTD needs to be connected digitally from source to submission without interruption. No manual re-entry can be made at any stage.

✓ Compliant: Bank feeds are direct to your software → submitted via API

✓ Non Compliant: A report is downloaded, totals are then retyped into a spreadsheet and then uploaded again.

The manual re-entry clears the link. HMRC compliance reviews focus in particular on the integrity of the link throughout the process. 

→ Check your MTD for VAT status: https://www.gov.uk/guidance/make-sure-you-have-compatible-software-for-making-tax-digital-for-vat

Penalty points — how they stack up

Filer TypePoints Before Financial Penalty
Annual Filers 2 points 
Quarterly Filers 4 points 
Monthly Filers 5 points 

One point is added for every late return. For every repeat late submission after the initial: £200 per late submission until a clean compliance period has been reached, which resets the counter. A quarterly filer is three late returns away from being subject to continued fines. 

Common VAT errors that trigger HMRC notices

  • Input VAT for block entertainment 
  • Using the incorrect application rate on a supply
  • Manually entering the digital link
  • Failing to register after exceeding the £90,000 threshold
  • Failure to properly manage VAT accounting for imports (post-Brexit).
  • Unsuccessfully allocating partial exemption apportionment

The last two are often the basis for full compliance enquiries, rather than penalties. 

Making Tax Digital for Income Tax (MTD ITSA) — Live from April 2026

Who is in scope right now

MTD ITSA will be compulsory for anyone with combined self-employment and property income over £50,000 on their 2024/25 Self Assessment return from 6 April 2026.

The annual return is substituted with:

  • 4 quarterly updates (income & expenses) sent electronically.
  • An end-of-period statement
  • A final declaration

They must be submitted via the software that HMRC has approved. The Portal does not work with HMRC. 

→ Find compatible MTD ITSA software: https://www.gov.uk/guidance/find-software-thats-compatible-with-making-tax-digital-for-income-tax

2026 quarterly update deadlines

Quarter Period Deadline
Q1April-June 20265 August 2026
Q2July-September 20265 November 2026
Q3October- December 20265 February 2027
Q4January- March 20275 May 2027

If your qualifying income was above £50,000 on your 2024/25 return and you have not started quarterly submissions, you are already late. The Q1 deadline was 5 August 2026. Seek advice from a qualified accountant immediately.

Upcoming threshold changes

Date Income Threshold
April 2026(Now)£50,000
April 2027£30,000
April 2028£20,000

HMRC estimates 42% of all self-employed UK taxpayers will be within MTD by 2028.

The Hidden Costs: Interest, Non-Deductibility, and Director Liability

Daily interest — no notification sent

HMRC charges 7.75% per annum from the day after your deadline. No warning letter. No grace period.

Amount OutstandingDaily Charge After 90 Days 
£10,000£2.12/day~£191
£50,000£10.62/day~£955
£100,000£21.23/day~£1,911

You won’t know the total until you’ve paid in full and HMRC has issued the interest notice with payment confirmation.

Penalties are never tax-deductible

All HMRC penalties (file, payment, surcharge, and daily) are specifically disallowed as a business expense. There is no cost saving because a penalty fee of £500 is charged to your business, and you need to pay £500. 

Director’s personal liability

The powers of the Finance Act allow HMRC to seek the director’s personal liability in cases of deliberate non-compliance and in cases where the company has been wound up, for example, with outstanding tax liabilities where HMRC could have known that were due. 

New enforcement powers post-2020 have seen directors of companies in administration or liquidation investigated for personal recovery action when companies have not had PAYE running. 

What compounding looks like in practice

A sole trader with a combined income of £65,000:

  • Misses MTD ITSA Q1 submission: -1 point
  • Misses Q2 → 2 points
  • Late returns of VAT more than three days: 1 point
  • Late balancing payment of £12,000 in January → ~£100 in HMRC interest 

None of these are tax-deductible. Every one of them could have been prevented with a UK tax deadlines calendar and a standing order. 

How to Build a Tax Calendar That Actually Works

Those businesses that always follow uk tax deadlines and manage to avoid penalties are not necessarily more organised than others. They have improved infrastructure.

1. Map every obligation on 6 April.

Make a list of all the tax deadlines for the next year. Give them a name: give one a named person for each. Tasks are forgotten if no one is assigned to them.

2. Set two alerts: 30 days and 7 days before every deadline.

The 30-day warning activates preparations. It takes 7 days to be alerted, so everything should be ready to submit. If it’s not at 7 days, then it’s a problem, not a deadline.

3. Close your books monthly, not quarterly.

Monthly reconciliation is not a problem anymore: VAT returns are hours long. This will keep your estimate of corporation tax up to date. You don’t panic and stop filing.

4. Separate the CT600 payment and filing into two calendar events.

They’re not the same deadline. There is no connection between them. Mark them in isolation, using a different preparation step.


5. Use MTD-compatible software as your single source of truth.
 

Xero, QuickBooks, Sage, and FreeAgent all maintain digital links natively. Manual re-entry is the fastest route to a compliance failure.

→ HMRC list of approved MTD software: https://www.gov.uk/guidance/sign-up-your-business-for-making-tax-digital-for-income-tax

6. File six weeks early. Pay on time.

The deadline is NOT a target date; it is a safety net. Errors can be corrected for the CT600 early correction. VAT paid two weeks late, at the end of the quarter, is never technical but financial.

How serious accountants actually work: There’s no deadline on the deadline day. 6 to 8 weeks early for returns to CT600. Self-assessments are submitted in October, if possible. VAT returns are filed within 2 weeks of the end of each quarter. When you have a deadline to meet, there is the possibility of a penalty if there are disruptions. When it’s your safety net, things are kept manageable. Enter all obligations on 6 April.

What to Do If You Cannot Pay on Time

Contact HMRC in advance of the deadline, not after.

Time to Pay (TTP) arrangements enable eligible taxpayers to spread liabilities over time. If your debt is under £30,000, then you can apply for a Self Assessment debt online, instead of calling HMRC within the 60-day period.

Interest continues to run throughout TTP. However, penalty payments can be suspended during the arrangement period — a much better deal than paying the penalty.

→ Set up a Time to Pay arrangement: https://www.gov.uk/difficulties-paying-hmrc

 → Self Assessment TTP (under £30k): https://www.gov.uk/pay-self-assessment-tax-bill/pay-in-instalments(online) Contact HMRC before the deadline — not after.

Can You Appeal an HMRC Penalty?

Yes — but on very restricted grounds.

Accepted: Serious illness or bereavement, or genuine failure of the HMRC system at the time of submission, are considered as a good cause.

Not accepted: using a third party (accountant/Bookkeeper), if unaware of the deadline, busy, or cash flow issues.

Appeals must be made in writing within 30 days of the penalty notice and in support of the appeal. 

→ Appeal a Self Assessment penalty: https://www.gov.uk/appeal-tax-penalty

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: 1 What is the Self Assessment filing deadline for 2025/26?

Paper: 31 October 2026. Online: 31st January at midnight 2027. Tax owed (balance to be paid plus first payment on account) is also due 31 January 2027. 

Q2: When is corporation tax due for a 31 March 2025 year-end?

The payment was due on 1 January 2026. CT600 filing deadline was due 31 March 2026. They’re all independent — timely payments do not equal timely filing. 

Q3: What are the CT600 penalties in 2026?

£200 on day one (from 20th April 2026) and again in three months, capped at £200 at six months and 10% at twelve months if tax is not paid. Affects dormant companies with no tax liability. 

Q4: Does MTD ITSA apply to me?

Yes — If the total of all your self-employment and property income is over £50,000 on your 2024/25 return, it will be after 6 April 2026. The deadline for Q1 was 5 August 2026. If you haven’t started, get help right away. 

Q5: What is HMRC’s late payment interest rate?

7.75% APR (as of January 2026), paid daily. On £50,000 outstanding, that is £10.62 per day. 

Q6: Do I need to file a CT600 if my company is dormant?

Yes. HMRC needs to receive a CT600 from every limited company in the UK, including dormant companies with no income and no tax to pay. The penalty for not filing is £200 from day one. 

Q7: What VAT rate applies to my business?

Standard rate: 20%. Reduced rate: 5%. There are categories of zero-rated and exempted supplies — refer to the type of your supply at: https://www.gov.uk/guidance/rates-of-vat-on-different-goods-and-services

Key HMRC and Companies House URLs for 2026

Task URL
File Self Assessment onlinehttps://www.gov.uk/log-in-file-self-assessment-tax-return
Pay Self Assessmenthttps://www.gov.uk/pay-self-assessment-tax-bill
Register for Self Assessmenthttps://www.gov.uk/register-for-self-assessment
Pay corporation taxhttps://www.gov.uk/pay-corporation-tax
File CT600 and Companies House accountshttps://www.gov.uk/file-your-company-accounts-and-tax-return
File Companies House accounts separatelyhttps://www.gov.uk/file-your-confirmation-statement-with-companies-house
VAT return deadlineshttps://www.gov.uk/vat-returns/deadlines
MTD for VAThttps://www.gov.uk/guidance/making-tax-digital-for-vat
MTD ITSA softwarehttps://www.gov.uk/guidance/find-software-thats-compatible-with-making-tax-digital-for-income-tax
Appeal a penaltyhttps://www.gov.uk/appeal-tax-penalty
Time to Pay arrangementhttps://www.gov.uk/difficulties-paying-hmrc
PAYE and payrollhttps://www.gov.uk/running-payroll
P11D filinghttps://www.gov.uk/employer-reporting-expenses-benefits
Capital Gains Taxhttps://www.gov.uk/report-and-pay-your-capital-gains-tax

Sources: Companies House, HMRC gov.uk (May 2026), and CT600 fines advice (April 2026 update). A trained accountant should always confirm deadlines that are dependent on your accounting period.

Picture of Written by: Sanchi Seth
Written by: Sanchi Seth

Sanchi Seth is the Content Head and Senior Content Writer at Aone Outsourcing Solutions, with 8+ years of experience specializing in Canadian tax and accounting content. She focuses on areas such as income tax, corporate tax, payroll compliance, and CRA regulations, creating clear, reliable content tailored for Canadian businesses and CPA firms. She simplifies complex tax concepts into practical insights that support informed decision-making and regulatory compliance.

Picture of Reviewed by: Bhavani Shankar
Reviewed by: Bhavani Shankar

Bhavani Shankar is the Chief Growth Officer at Aone Outsourcing Solutions and a member of the Board of Directors. With 15+ years of experience, he leads client relationships and oversees accounting operations, including reporting and compliance for Canadian clients. He focuses on driving growth, operational efficiency, and long-term client value.

Qualifications Business Strategy | Client Relationship Management | Accounting & Compliance (CA)

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