MTD Income Tax for landlords with property income
Prepare UK property records for MTD Income Tax with categories, agent statements, finance costs and quarterly review.
MTD Income Tax is now a live planning issue for UK landlords with rental income that may fall within MTD. Landlord records often arrive through letting agent statements, mortgage statements and repairs invoices rather than normal sales invoices. This guide narrows the job to property income record keeping, so the business can move from annual clean-up to a repeatable quarterly review.
For wider context, use Making Tax Digital and Software . If the topic affects a filing deadline, software choice or tax treatment, confirm the live position before acting. The workflow below is designed to keep the evidence in one place so the owner, bookkeeper and accountant can all review the same record.
Official point to verify
GOV.UK currently phases MTD for Income Tax by qualifying income: over £50,000 from 6 April 2026, over £30,000 from 6 April 2027 and over £20,000 from 6 April 2028. HMRC also says partnerships will move onto a later timetable. Check the current wording in GOV.UK MTD Income Tax timing guidance before making a binding filing, software or tax decision.
What to control
| Area | Control | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Property source | Separate UK property, foreign property and trade income | Each source can need a different software setup |
| Agent statements | Record gross rent, fees and deductions separately | Net bank receipts hide the tax detail |
| Finance costs | Track mortgage interest and capital separately | Tax treatment differs from ordinary repairs |
| Joint property | Decide how joint records will be handled | HMRC guidance has special quarterly update choices |
Review routine
Build the routine around monthly bookkeeping rather than waiting for the quarterly deadline. Reconcile the bank, clear uncategorised transactions, review owner drawings or property transfers, then let the software produce the update totals. The accountant should review exceptions, not rebuild the ledger.
A useful review note should answer three questions: what source evidence was used, what judgement was applied, and who approved the treatment. Keep that note beside the transaction or period report rather than in a separate inbox.
Common mistakes
- Posting letting agent receipts as one income number
- Mixing capital improvements with repairs
- Leaving joint property expenses until January
The best prevention is a short, repeated checklist. If a control is too complicated to run every month or quarter, it will probably fail when the deadline is close.
How ReAI helps
ReAI helps by keeping invoices, bank imports, receipts, review notes and accountant access in one place. That makes quarterly MTD work a by-product of ordinary bookkeeping instead of a separate spreadsheet exercise. For hands-on help with setup, see Accounting Assistance for Small Businesses .
Summary
Treat MTD Income Tax for landlords with property income as a recurring accounting control, not a one-off admin task. Put the source data, review owner, exception list and submission evidence in the same system before the deadline arrives. That makes compliance work easier to check and much less dependent on memory.