Choosing Accounting Software
Pick accounting software that fits your UK business, meets MTD rules and grows with you.
The right accounting software quietly removes hours of admin every month, keeps your records straight for HMRC and gives you a clear view of how the business is doing. The wrong choice does the opposite: clunky workflows, features you never use and a nagging worry that the figures are not quite right. With Making Tax Digital now reshaping how UK businesses keep records and file, picking software that fits your size, sector and ambitions is a decision worth getting right. This guide sits within our Making Tax Digital and software hub and walks you through the features that matter, the questions to ask and a simple checklist to use before you buy.
Why the Right Software Matters
Accounting software is more than a digital replacement for a spreadsheet. It becomes the single source of truth for your invoices, expenses, bank transactions and tax position. Choosing well means less manual data entry, fewer errors and accounts that are always ready for your accountant or for filing.
The cost of switching later is real, so it pays to think ahead. A tool that suits a sole trader today might creak when you take on staff, register for VAT or incorporate as a limited company. Equally, an enterprise package aimed at large firms can overwhelm a one-person business with features and pricing you do not need. The goal is a sensible fit for where you are now, with room to grow.
Core Features to Look For
Most credible packages cover the basics, but the quality and ease of those basics vary widely. Focus on the features you will actually use day to day:
- Bank reconciliation that matches transactions quickly and accurately
- Invoicing with branded templates and online payment options
- Expense tracking, ideally with receipt capture from your phone
- VAT handling and the ability to file returns digitally
- Reporting such as profit and loss, balance sheet and cash flow
- Multi-user access so your accountant can log in directly
A clean, intuitive interface matters more than a long feature list. If the software feels awkward in a free trial, you are unlikely to keep your records up to date, and patchy records cause the very problems good software is meant to solve. For a wider view of getting the routine right, see our bookkeeping guides .
MTD Compatibility
Under Making Tax Digital, businesses must keep digital records and use compatible software to submit returns to HMRC. MTD for VAT already applies to VAT-registered businesses, and MTD for Income Tax is being phased in for self-employed people and landlords above set income thresholds. Whatever you buy should be HMRC-recognised for the obligations that apply to you.
Two points are easy to miss. First, “MTD compatible” should mean the software can submit directly to HMRC, not just export figures you then key in elsewhere. Second, if you currently rely on spreadsheets, check whether you need bridging software to keep the digital links intact. Before committing, work through our MTD for VAT checklist so you know exactly what your business must do.
Bank Feeds and Automation
A live bank feed connects your business account to the software so transactions appear automatically, usually within a day. This single feature saves more time than almost any other, because reconciliation becomes a matter of confirming matches rather than typing everything by hand.
Good software builds on the feed with sensible automation: rules that categorise recurring payments, suggested matches for invoices and bills, and receipt scanning that reads the key details for you. The less you have to enter manually, the more accurate and current your records stay. Our guide to automating your bookkeeping explains how to set these tools up so they genuinely earn their keep.
Invoicing and VAT Handling
For most businesses, getting paid is the priority, so the invoicing tools deserve a close look. Strong software lets you raise professional invoices, set them to recur, and offer customers a way to pay online, which tends to shorten the wait for cash.
On the tax side, the software should handle the VAT scheme you use, whether standard accounting, the Flat Rate Scheme or cash accounting, and apply the applicable rate correctly to each line. It should also produce the figures for your return and submit them under MTD. If your VAT setup is not yet settled, our notes on choosing the right VAT scheme will help you decide before you configure the software.
Integrations and Apps
Your accounting tool rarely works alone. Look at how well it connects with the other systems you rely on, because smooth integrations remove duplicate data entry and reduce mistakes. Common connections worth checking include:
- Payment providers and card readers
- E-commerce platforms and online marketplaces
- Payroll software for wages and pension submissions
- Point-of-sale systems for retail and hospitality
- Time-tracking and project tools for service businesses
A mobile app is increasingly important too, letting you photograph receipts, send invoices and check balances on the move. The aim is an ecosystem where information flows once and lands everywhere it is needed.
Pricing and Support
Headline prices can be misleading, so compare the total cost for the features you genuinely need. Many providers tier their plans, and the entry level may exclude things like VAT submission, multiple users or payroll. Watch for limits on transactions, invoices or bank accounts, and for promotional rates that rise sharply after the first few months.
| Consideration | What to check |
|---|---|
| Plan tiers | Which features sit behind higher tiers, and which you actually need |
| User limits | Whether your accountant counts as a paid seat |
| Hidden extras | Payroll, extra companies, transaction caps or add-on fees |
| Promotional pricing | The renewal price once any introductory discount ends |
| Support | Availability, channels, and whether help is UK-based |
Support quality is easy to overlook until something goes wrong near a filing deadline. Check what is included as standard, the hours cover is offered, and whether there is a solid help centre and active user community.
A Buyer’s Checklist
Before you commit, run through these questions:
- Is it HMRC-recognised for the MTD obligations that apply to me?
- Does it offer a bank feed for my business account?
- Can it raise invoices and take online payments?
- Does it handle my VAT scheme and submit returns digitally?
- Will it scale as I grow, add staff or incorporate?
- Does it integrate with the other tools I use?
- Is the pricing clear, with no surprises at renewal?
- Have I tested it with a free trial using my own data?
Always make use of a trial. Enter a few real transactions, raise a test invoice and reconcile some bank lines. Software that feels effortless in your hands is the one you will keep up to date, and consistent records are what make tax season calm rather than chaotic.