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Pillar Guide · Step-by-step · 2026/27

UK Self Assessment for first-timers

If you've just realised you owe HMRC a tax return for the first time — side hustle, freelance work, rental income, large investment gains, child benefit clawback — this is the complete walkthrough. Registration, records, deadlines, online filing, and the pitfalls that catch first-timers every January.

Step 1 — Confirm you actually need to file

About 12 million people file Self Assessment returns each year. The most common triggers for first-time filers in 2026/27 are:

Use the side-hustle checker for the side-income decision and the readiness checklist to walk through every trigger systematically.

Step 2 — Register with HMRC (allow 4-6 weeks)

If you've never filed before, you must register first. Registration is at gov.uk/register-for-self-assessment. There are slightly different forms depending on the trigger — sole trader, partnership, "not self-employed but otherwise required" — but they all eventually produce a Unique Taxpayer Reference (UTR): a 10-digit number that's your tax-system fingerprint forever afterwards.

HMRC posts a separate activation code for the online Government Gateway service after registration. Allow up to 10 working days for the code to arrive. The activation code expires after 28 days of issue, so don't lose it.

Deadline to register for a tax year is 5 October following the end of that tax year. So for a return covering 2026/27 (the year ending 5 April 2027), you must register by 5 October 2027. Most first-timers register much later than this and incur penalties; see the deadlines section below.

Step 3 — Gather your records

Before opening the form, collect every document for the tax year:

For the self-employed, HMRC requires you to keep records for at least 5 years after the 31 January submission deadline. Bank app statements, photos of receipts, and a simple spreadsheet are usually enough — you don't need fancy software unless your turnover is approaching the VAT threshold.

Step 4 — File online before 31 January

For most first-timers, the online return is the right approach. It's free, walks you through the right supplementary pages based on your answers, and tells you the exact tax bill at the end. Log in at gov.uk/log-in-file-self-assessment-tax-return with your Government Gateway credentials.

The form is divided into sections:

The online system shows you only the supplementary pages you need based on your answers to the upfront "About you" section. Save and resume as often as you want before submission.

Step 5 — Pay by 31 January

The same 31 January deadline applies to:

Payments on account come as a surprise to most first-timers. If you owe £4,000 in January for 2026/27, HMRC also expects you to pay £2,000 alongside (the first 50% of estimated 2027/28 tax) — making the January bill effectively £6,000. The second £2,000 payment on account is due 31 July. Plan cash flow accordingly.

Payment options: online banking via Faster Payments (instant), Direct Debit (set up several days ahead), card payment via HMRC's portal, or by post for cheques (allow 3 working days). The bank account details are at gov.uk/pay-self-assessment-tax-bill.

Deadlines for the 2026/27 return

DeadlineWhat's due
5 April 2027End of the 2026/27 tax year
5 October 2027Deadline to register if it's your first SA year
31 October 2027Paper return deadline (very few people use this)
30 December 2027Online deadline if you want HMRC to collect via tax code (income under £30,000)
31 January 2028Online return + first payment + first payment on account 2027/28
31 July 2028Second payment on account 2027/28

Penalties for missing deadlines

HMRC will accept "reasonable excuse" appeals (serious illness, bereavement, IT system failure, etc.) but the bar is high. Don't rely on getting penalties cancelled.

Common first-timer mistakes

FAQs

Do I have to file if I only earned £900 from a side hustle?

No — the £1,000 trading allowance covers casual self-employment income up to that amount. You don't need to register or file unless other triggers apply.

Can I file Self Assessment myself or do I need an accountant?

For straightforward situations (employment + a side hustle, or rental income from one property), the online form is genuinely usable by non-experts. Accountants typically charge £200-£500 for an individual return; that's worthwhile if you have multiple income sources, foreign elements, or substantial CGT. For first-timers with simple circumstances, doing it yourself is fine — and the online form does most of the maths.

What if I miss the 31 January deadline?

You'll get an immediate £100 penalty. File as soon as possible to avoid the £10/day daily penalties that kick in after three months. If you have a genuine reasonable excuse, you can appeal in writing within 30 days of the penalty notice.

Do I keep filing Self Assessment forever once I start?

No. If your circumstances change so that none of the SA triggers apply (e.g. you stop being self-employed, sell the rental, drop below £150k income), you can ask HMRC to remove you from Self Assessment. You'll still need to file the year in which the change happens.

Can I file before the end of the tax year?

No — you must wait until after 5 April for the year to close. HMRC's online portal opens for the new year's filing in early April.

What if I made a mistake on a previous return?

You have 12 months from the original 31 January submission deadline to amend the return online. Beyond that, you write to HMRC explaining the change. They have 4 years to enquire into a return retrospectively (or 6 years for "careless" errors, 20 years for "deliberate").

Related calculators and tools

Self Assessment readiness checklist — walks through every trigger and document. January 2027 cycle checklist — current-year specific. Side-hustle checker — single-question test for casual income. Tax calculator — model the bill before filing. Sole trader calculator — for the self-employed.