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Self-employed survival index · 2026/27

The UK freelancer tax survival guide - 2026/27

If you’re a UK freelancer in 2026/27 - sole trader, contractor, gig worker, or side-hustle earner - this is the index of every tax obligation, allowance and decision that affects you. Each section links to a deep guide. Save this page and work through it in your first year of self-employment.

5-minute read

UK freelancers in 2026/27 must: register for Self Assessment within 3 months of starting (or by 5 October after the tax year); file annually by 31 January (online); pay income tax + Class 4 NI via Self Assessment; register for VAT if turnover exceeds £90,000; register for MTD ITSA from April 2026 if income above £50,000; keep digital records from MTD start date; and arrange their own pension (no auto-enrolment). The £1,000 Trading Allowance is available for very small earnings.

Your year-one priority list

Month 1 of tradingDecide structure: sole trader vs Ltd CoBelow £40k profit: usually sole trader. Above £60k: often Ltd Co. See our sole trader vs Ltd Co decision guide.
Month 1-3Register for Self AssessmentSA1 (non-self-employed source) or CWF1 (self-employed). Required within 3 months. See how to register guide.
Month 1-12Set up digital recordsEither bookkeeping software (Xero, FreeAgent, QuickBooks) or a clean spreadsheet. From MTD ITSA start (April 2026 if £50k+), software is mandatory.
Month 1-12Set up a tax savings bucket25-30% of every payment into a separate account. Pays your tax bill on 31 January.
Month 6-12Open a SIPP and set up monthly contributionsNo auto-enrolment for self-employed - the responsibility is yours. See our self-employed pension guide.
Year-endCalculate , register withiIf rolling-12-month turnover above £90,000, register within 30 days.
By 31 January next yearFile Self Assessment + pay first tax billYear 1 tax + first Payments on Account = potentially 150% of one year’s tax in one payment.

The 10 obligations and decisions every UK freelancer must handle

1. Self Assessment registration

Mandatory within 3 months of starting self-employment, or by 5 October following the tax year. Penalty for late registration: £100+. Full guide: How to register for Self Assessment.

2. Annual Self Assessment filing

Online by 31 January following the tax year (or paper by 31 October). Use the SA100 main return plus SA103 self-employment supplementary page. Full walkthrough: Self Assessment walkthrough 2026/27.

3. Income tax + Class 4 NI

Calculated on net profit. Income tax: 0% / 20% / 40% / 45% by band. Class 4 NI: 6% / 2% above £12,570. See: Class 4 NI deep dive.

4. Payments on Account

50% of last year’s tax due 31 January with current year balance; another 50% by 31 July. Catches every new self-employed person in year 2. See: Payments on Account guide.

5. Allowable expenses

Reduce taxable profit by claiming legitimate business expenses (office, travel, use of home, equipment, professional fees). See: Allowable expenses guide.

6. VAT registration and scheme choice

Mandatory above £90,000 turnover. Voluntary below £90,000. Four schemes: Standard, Flat Rate, Cash Accounting, Annual Accounting. See: UK VAT schemes explained.

7. Making Tax Digital for ITSA

Mandatory from April 2026 if combined self-employed + property income above £50,000. Quarterly digital submissions + EOPS + Final Declaration. See: MTD ITSA guide.

8. Pension

No auto-enrolment. Set up your own SIPP. Annual Allowance £60,000. 20-47% tax relief depending on income. See: Self-employed pension guide.

9. Mortgage preparation

2-3 years of SA302s typically required. Aggressive expense claims hurt borrowing capacity. Plan 12-24 months ahead of application. See: Self-employed mortgage guide.

10. Sole trader vs Ltd Co incorporation

Break-even around £50-60k profit. Above that, Ltd Co often saves £2,000-£8,000/year. See: Sole trader vs Ltd Co decision.

If your work resembles employment - the IR35 problem

If you have one main client and your work resembles employment (working hours dictated, equipment provided, exclusivity, etc.), your contracts may fall "inside IR35". The tax consequences are material: deemed-employment income tax and NI on most of the contract value. Use our IR35 employment status checker if uncertain.

If you work in construction - the CIS overlay

Construction subcontractors face CIS deductions on top of normal self-employed obligations. 20% deducted at source (standard) or 30% (unregistered). Reclaimable via Self Assessment. See: CIS guide.

Critical deadlines summary

DateObligation
5 October (after tax year end)Register for Self Assessment if first year
31 OctoberPaper Self Assessment deadline (if filing on paper, rare)
31 JanuaryOnline Self Assessment filing + balancing payment + 1st POA
31 July2nd Payment on Account
30 days from £90k threshold crossingVAT registration
From April 2026MTD ITSA quarterly submissions (if £50k+ qualifying income)
5 May (annual MTD year-end)Q4 MTD update due

The financial protection layer

Self-employed people have less safety net than employees. Plan for:

Open the sole trader calculator

Run your annual tax bill, Class 4 NI and Payments on Account in one place. The most-used calculator for UK freelancers.

Open the sole trader calculator

Sources and references

Self Assessment framework from gov.uk Self Assessment. VAT thresholds from gov.uk VAT thresholds. MTD ITSA from gov.uk MTD. IR35 from gov.uk IR35. Maternity Allowance from gov.uk Maternity Allowance.

UK Tax Drag is educational and not regulated financial, tax, legal or business advice - see the disclaimer for the full position. Always verify current rates and rules at the original government sources before acting.

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