Accounting for Photographers
A practical guide to accounting for photographers in the UK, covering business setup, allowable expenses, capital allowances on equipment and VAT considerations.
Whether you shoot weddings, portraits, commercial campaigns or stock photography, HMRC treats your photography business the same as any other trade. You need to keep records, claim the right expenses, file tax returns on time and understand how VAT applies to your specific mix of services.
Most photographers start as sole traders because the setup is simple and the costs are low. As your turnover grows, incorporating as a limited company may become more tax-efficient, but the right structure depends on your personal circumstances and income level.
Business structure
| Factor | Sole trader | Limited company |
|---|---|---|
| Setup cost | Free (register with HMRC) | £12 at Companies House |
| Tax | Income Tax + Class 2/4 NIC on profits | Corporation Tax on profits + personal tax on salary/dividends |
| Personal liability | Unlimited | Limited to company assets |
| Admin | Self Assessment return annually | Annual accounts, Corporation Tax return, confirmation statement |
| Perceived professionalism | Adequate for most clients | Some corporate clients prefer dealing with a limited company |
For most photographers earning under £50,000-£60,000, the sole trader structure is simpler. Above that, the tax savings from incorporating often outweigh the additional administration.
Allowable expenses
Photographers have a wide range of business expenses they can deduct from taxable profits. The rule is that the expense must be incurred wholly and exclusively for business purposes.
Equipment
| Expense | Deductible? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Camera bodies and lenses | Yes | Capital allowance (AIA – full deduction in year of purchase) |
| Lighting equipment | Yes | Capital allowance |
| Tripods, bags, memory cards | Yes | Full deduction as revenue expenditure |
| Computer and monitors | Yes | Capital allowance (or revenue if under £100) |
| Editing software (Lightroom, Photoshop) | Yes | Revenue expenditure (subscription) |
| Backup drives and cloud storage | Yes | Revenue expenditure |
| Printer (for prints) | Yes | Capital allowance |
| Drone (for aerial photography) | Yes | Capital allowance; must have CAA licence for commercial use |
The Annual Investment Allowance (AIA) of £1,000,000 means virtually any equipment purchase is deductible in full in the year you buy it. This applies whether you are a sole trader or a limited company.
Studio and workspace
- Studio rent – fully deductible
- Business rates on studio premises
- Utilities for the studio
- Home office costs – flat rate (£10-£26/month depending on hours) or actual proportion of household costs
- Props and backdrops – fully deductible
- Studio insurance – fully deductible
Travel
- Mileage to shoots, client meetings, recce visits – 45p per mile for the first 10,000 miles, 25p thereafter
- Public transport fares for business travel
- Parking at shoot locations
- Hotels for overnight shoots away from home
- Subsistence – meals while travelling on business (reasonable amounts)
- Flights for destination shoots
Commuting between home and a permanent studio is not deductible. However, travel from your home (if it is your main place of work) to a temporary client location is deductible.
Professional costs
- Insurance – professional indemnity, public liability, equipment insurance
- Professional memberships – BIPP (British Institute of Professional Photography), The Societies, MPA
- Training courses relevant to your current work
- Portfolio website hosting, domain and design
- Marketing – Google Ads, social media advertising, printed cards
- Accountancy fees
- Second shooter fees – payments to assistants or second photographers
Other expenses
- Album and print costs (for client orders)
- Editing outsourcing (retouching services)
- Music licences for slideshows
- Model and property release costs
- Bank charges on your business account
- Bad debts – invoices you cannot collect
VAT considerations
Registration threshold
You must register for VAT if your taxable turnover exceeds £90,000 in any rolling 12-month period. You can also register voluntarily below this threshold.
Should you register voluntarily?
| Client type | Voluntary registration? |
|---|---|
| Mostly corporate/commercial clients (VAT-registered) | Often worthwhile – they reclaim the VAT you charge |
| Mostly private clients (weddings, portraits) | Usually not – your prices effectively increase by 20% |
| Significant equipment purchases | Possibly – you can reclaim input VAT on purchases |
VAT on photography services
Photography services are standard-rated at 20%. This includes:
- Wedding photography packages
- Portrait sessions
- Commercial shoots
- Licensing of images
Prints and physical products (albums, framed prints) are also standard-rated.
If you sell digital downloads or licences to overseas customers, different rules may apply depending on the customer’s location and VAT status.
Flat Rate Scheme
The VAT Flat Rate Scheme simplifies VAT accounting. You charge VAT at 20% but pay HMRC a lower fixed percentage of your gross turnover. For photography, the flat rate is 11% (or 10% in the first year of VAT registration). This can be beneficial if your input VAT (VAT on purchases) is low relative to your output VAT (VAT on sales).
Record-keeping
HMRC requires you to keep:
- All invoices you issue to clients
- Receipts for every business purchase
- Bank statements for your business account
- Mileage log if claiming vehicle expenses
- A record of all equipment purchased (date, cost, supplier)
Keep records for at least 5 years after the 31 January submission deadline for the relevant tax year.
Use cloud accounting software with automated bank feeds to reduce the manual effort. Photograph your receipts with a mobile app so they are stored digitally and linked to the correct transaction.
Self Assessment filing
Key dates
| Deadline | What |
|---|---|
| 5 April | Tax year ends |
| 31 July | Second payment on account due |
| 5 October | Deadline to register for Self Assessment (first year) |
| 31 October | Paper return deadline |
| 31 January | Online return deadline + balancing payment + first payment on account |
Payments on account
If your tax bill exceeds £1,000, HMRC requires advance payments towards next year’s bill. Each payment on account is 50% of the previous year’s liability, due on 31 January and 31 July. This catches many photographers out in their second year when they face the current year’s tax plus advance payments for the next.
Set aside 25-30% of every payment you receive into a separate savings account to cover your tax and NIC.
Simplified expenses
If you work from home and use your own vehicle, HMRC’s simplified expenses scheme lets you use flat rates instead of calculating actual costs:
- Vehicle costs: 45p/mile (first 10,000 miles), 25p thereafter
- Working from home: £10-£26/month depending on hours worked
The flat rates are simpler to administer but may give a smaller deduction than the actual cost method, particularly if you have a dedicated home studio.
Common mistakes
- Not separating personal and business finances – open a business bank account
- Missing equipment capital allowances – claim the full cost of cameras and gear in the year of purchase
- Forgetting to log mileage – keep a contemporaneous mileage record for every business journey
- Not issuing proper invoices – include your name, address, UTR (or VAT number), invoice number, date, description and amount
- Ignoring the VAT threshold – monitor your rolling 12-month turnover and register on time
- Not keeping digital backups of receipts – paper receipts fade; photograph them immediately