The Locksmith Journal Mar/Apr 2019 - Issue 61 | Page 26

26 • INDUSTRYNEWS PROUD SPONSOR OF THE LOCKSMITH JOURNAL Meet The Deadline for MTD » » WITH THE FIRST DEADLINE FOR MTD, also known as Making Tax Digital, upon us, it’s time to stop asking whether it’s necessary and start focusing on how installers can implement a solution. Benjamin Dyer, CEO of Powered Now, looks at how to comply with MTD. MTD is a whole program, running over many years, to get all businesses and individuals to file their taxes digitally. The first deadline for VAT registered businesses is 1st April 2019 and all VAT returns for periods starting on or after 1st April 2019 must be made under MTD. There are very few people in business who enjoy changes to regulation and keeping up with every change is particularly hard for small companies. Unfortunately, this is a change which is compulsory. The best approach is to get it done as quickly as possible. All of the best with that. MAKING TAX DIGITAL – JUST WHAT IS REQUIRED? There are two parts to the MTD for VAT requirement: • An electronic audit trail of sales and costs that make up a VAT return must be kept on computer • All VAT returns must be made using software running on behalf of the business and that links to the audit trail. The software must use the new ‘MTD Portal’. The existing web form for VAT returns which is currently used by 98% of VAT registered businesses will not be available in the future In other words, all communications to and from HMRC will be electronic and everything submitted to HMRC must be justified by electronic records. Paper records are no longer good enough, they must be held on computer. LOCKSMITHJOURNAL.CO.UK | MAR/APR 2019 Sponsored by ERA - Total Security HMRC COMMUNICATION HMRC has been very slow to communicate about MTD and letters informing VAT registered businesses only started being sent in December 2018. The final letters have been sent in February 2019 so there has not been too much time to comply. The result of the communication delay may be why HMRC are allowing some temporary exceptions to the rules, which I explain below. COMPLYING WITH MTD FOR VAT 98% of VAT returns were already being submitted electronically through the HMRC web portal, even before MTD for VAT became law. However, this was simply recording the ‘9 box return’ and this web portal will be closed. In contrast, only 8% of VAT registered businesses submit their VAT returns using their own accounting software running either on their own computers or in the cloud. These are disproportionately larger businesses. Given these figures, it’s interesting to note that the major distinction when it comes to MTD will be between those businesses which submit their current VAT return from an accounting system and those that don’t. This applies whether they run their own system in-house or it is run by an external accountant. People using an accounting system to submit VAT returns are unlikely to struggle with MTD. Provided all individual costs and sales are already entered into the system there will probably be nothing further to do. However, for businesses that do their own VAT return manually or get an accountant or book-keeper to do it, there is more of a challenge. The critical change is that VAT registered installer businesses must put all of their individual sales and costs into a system with an MTD for VAT interface. With the exception outlined in the next section, they can achieve this as follows: • Give detailed records of all sales and costs to their accountant or bookkeeper who keys them into an accounting system. This might mean little change for the business other than the cost.