Some creative freelancers get a little nervous whenever a new HMRC initiative appears on the horizon.
The latest one causing a stir is Making Tax Digital for Income Tax (MTD for ITSA), which is due to start rolling out from April 2026. If you’re a freelancer currently operating as a sole trader, you may have heard that incorporating a limited company lets you avoid it altogether.
So naturally, the question many creatives are asking is:
“Should I switch to a limited company just to avoid MTD?”
The short answer: yes, a limited company is outside the scope of MTD for Income Tax — but that doesn’t mean incorporating is automatically the right move.
Let’s unpack why.
Making Tax Digital for Income Tax is HMRC’s plan to modernise how self-employed people and landlords report their income.
From April 2026, if your combined self-employment and property income exceeds £50,000, you will need to:
In practical terms, this means that instead of submitting one Self Assessment return each year, you’ll be sending multiple updates throughout the year.
For freelancers used to the simplicity of a single annual tax return, that understandably sounds like a lot more admin.
Here’s the key point driving the conversation:
MTD for Income Tax only applies to individuals — not limited companies.
Limited companies already have their own reporting system:
But they do not need to send quarterly income updates under MTD.
Because of that, some freelancers are wondering whether forming a limited company is a simple way to sidestep the new rules.
Switching from sole trader to limited company can make sense in certain situations, particularly if your freelance business is growing.
At higher profit levels, operating through a company can sometimes reduce the overall tax bill through a combination of:
This tends to become more relevant once profits move comfortably beyond basic-rate tax territory.
A limited company is a separate legal entity.
In most circumstances this means your personal assets are protected if the business runs into financial trouble.
Some agencies, studios and production companies prefer working with limited companies, particularly when engaging freelancers for larger projects.
For certain creatives, having a company can simply feel like a more professional structure.
And yes — technically speaking:
Operating through a limited company removes the need to comply with MTD for Income Tax.
But that benefit alone shouldn’t drive the decision.
A limited company isn’t just a “sole trader with a different name”. It’s a different legal and administrative structure entirely.
Running a company means dealing with:
So while you may avoid quarterly MTD submissions, you gain a different set of responsibilities.
Limited company compliance is generally more complex than sole trader accounts and tax returns.
That usually means higher professional fees and more ongoing admin.
For freelancers with modest profits, operating through a company can actually be less tax-efficient once you factor in:
Every situation is different, but incorporating solely to reduce admin rarely stacks up financially.
There are plenty of circumstances where moving to a company is the right strategic move.
For example, if:
In those cases, incorporation might already be on the cards — and avoiding MTD may simply be a secondary benefit.
Probably not.
MTD will change how self-employed people report their numbers, but with good software and sensible processes it shouldn’t be particularly painful.
For most freelancers, the real decision between sole trader vs limited company should come down to:
MTD alone shouldn’t be the deciding factor.
Yes — forming a limited company means MTD for Income Tax won’t apply to you.
But incorporation is a structural change to your business, not just a way to dodge a reporting rule.
For many creative freelancers, staying as a sole trader and preparing for MTD with the right tools will be the simplest route.
For others, particularly those with growing profits or more ambitious plans, a limited company may be the logical next step anyway.
The key is to make the decision based on your numbers and your long-term plans, not just HMRC’s latest initiative.
Book a free meeting with one of our experts.