Tax Tips & News October 2025

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To October’s Tax Tips & News, our newsletter designed to bring you tax tips and news to keep you one step ahead of the taxman.

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We are committed to ensuring our clients receive useful tax and business advice and support throughout the year.

Please contact us for advice in your own specific circumstances. We’re here to help! October 2025

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· Making Tax Digital (MTD) for Income Tax starts in six months’
· 100,000 HMRC accounts hit by scammers’
· Government facing legal challenges over ‘family farms tax”
· The Autumn Budget – potential tax changes’
· October Questions and Answers’
· October Key Dates’

Making Tax Digital (MTD) for Income Tax starts in six months

Making Tax Digital (MTD) for Income Tax begins in April 2026. It will initially affect sole traders and landlords earning over £50,000 annually. The thresholds will gradually lower to £30,000 in 2027 and £20,000 in 2028.MTD will require the use of MTD-compatible accounting software for Income Tax Self-Assessment (ITSA). Quarterly tax submissions will be made instead of a single annual return.

This government initiative to modernise the tax system by digitising records and submissions was originally announced in 2015, and aims to reduce errors, save time, and combat tax fraud – especially among small businesses. MTD is already in place for VAT-registered businesses and sole traders. It is estimated that 864,000 sole traders and landlords will need to comply.

There are concerns that this change will potentially add administrative and financial burdens for small businesses. The transition phase may cause stress and confusion, especially for those unfamiliar with digital tools. Experts urge better education and support to help businesses adapt. It is also believed that regular quarterly updates will help businesses maintain up-to-date financial records, enabling better cash flow management and early identification of issues.

Let us know if you’d like help preparing for these changes or exploring accounting software options.

100,000 HMRC accounts hit by scammers

HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) revealed that it suffered a phishing attack that led to the compromise of around 100,000 personal tax accounts. The incident was described by HMRC officials as ‘organised crime’, targeting identity data outside HMRC systems.Scammers managed to extract £47 million through fraudulent PAYE repayments. The breach involved individual PAYE accounts, not corporate ones, and accounts for 0.2% of the PAYE population.

Despite the breach, affected individuals have not suffered financial loss, according to HMRC. They stated that ‘This was organised crime phishing for identity data outwith of HMRC systems, so stuff that banks and others will also unfortunately experience and then trying to use that data to create PAYE accounts to pay themselves a repayment and/or access an existing account’ and stressed that this was ‘not a cyber-attack, we have not been hacked, we have not had data extracted from us.’

The attack began last year and involved international jurisdictions. Arrests have been made as part of the investigation. HMRC locked down compromised accounts and has contacted or is in the process of contacting all affected taxpayers.

Government facing legal challenges over ‘family farms tax’