MTD quarterly deadlines and update periods
Under Making Tax Digital for Income Tax you send HMRC four updates a year plus a final tax return. The dates are fixed and the same every year. This guide sets out the calendar, explains the calendar-quarter election and cumulative updates, and covers what happens when a deadline is missed.
The standard calendar
The default update periods follow the tax year, which runs from 6 April to 5 April:
| Update | Period covered (cumulative) | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 | 6 April to 5 July | 7 August |
| Q2 | 6 April to 5 October | 7 November |
| Q3 | 6 April to 5 January | 7 February |
| Q4 | 6 April to 5 April | 7 May (after the tax year ends) |
Note the periods in the table: each update runs from the start of the tax year, not just the latest three months. That cumulative design is deliberate and helpful. If you discover an error in your Q1 figures, you do not resubmit Q1; the corrected year-to-date totals simply go in your Q2 update.
The calendar-quarter election
If 6 April period boundaries clash with how you already keep your books, you can elect to use calendar quarters instead: periods starting 1 April, with quarters ending 30 June, 30 September, 31 December and 31 March. The deadlines stay exactly the same (7 August, 7 November, 7 February, 7 May). The election is made in your software, per income source, and must be in place before you send the first update of the tax year; it then stays until you change it for a future year.
After the quarters: the year-end
Quarterly updates are only summaries of income and expenses by category. After the tax year ends you finalise things in your software: accounting adjustments, capital allowances, reliefs and any other income. Your completed tax return is due by 31 January following the end of the tax year, which is also when the balancing tax payment is due. Payments on account, where they apply, remain due on 31 January and 31 July. MTD changes how you report; it does not change when you pay.
Missing a deadline
Late submissions are penalised on a points system: one point per missed deadline, one point maximum per deadline even if you have several businesses. At four points you get a £200 penalty, then £200 for every further miss while at the threshold. Points expire after 24 months provided you stay below the threshold. Two softeners are worth knowing: HMRC is not issuing points for late quarterly updates during 2026/27, the first mandated year, and points reset once you meet all deadlines for a set period. Late payment is penalised separately (3% of tax outstanding at day 15 and day 30, then 10% annually for 2026/27, rising to 4%/4%/10% from 2027/28).
Two income sources, two sets of updates
Updates are per income source: a sole trade and a rental property each need their own quarterly updates, even though the deadlines coincide. Keep the records separate from the start; mixing rent and trade income in one account is the most common cause of messy quarters.
A practical rhythm
- Reconcile your business bank account monthly rather than quarterly; each update then takes minutes.
- After each quarter ends, run your statements through the quarterly reporter to get category totals per HMRC quarter, check them, and carry them into your MTD software before the 7th of the following month.
- Photograph receipts as you get them with the receipt scanner so expense evidence never piles up.
- Book time in January for the tax return itself; the quarterly updates do not file it for you.
Sources (last reviewed 3 July 2026):