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Side Hustle + Rental Income: Are You Over the £50k MTD Threshold?
The most common MTD misconception is treating the £50,000 threshold as an either/or test: “I earn £35k freelancing — I’m under £50k, so I’m fine.” That logic breaks when you also have rental income.
HMRC doesn’t look at each income stream in isolation. It adds them together. Self-employment income plus property income equals your qualifying income. Cross £50,000 on that combined figure and you’re mandated for Making Tax Digital for Income Tax from April 6, 2026 — regardless of how little either stream contributes individually.
The Combined-Income Trap: How HMRC Calculates Your Threshold
MTD for Income Tax applies to people with qualifying income above the threshold. The definition of qualifying income is specific — and it catches more people than they expect.
Qualifying income includes:
- Self-employment income (sole trader gross receipts — before expenses)
- Property income (rental receipts — before allowable deductions)
Qualifying income does NOT include:
- Employment income (your PAYE salary, even if it’s your main income)
- Dividends (from company shareholdings or investment funds)
- Savings interest (from bank accounts, ISAs, bonds)
- Pension income
- Capital gains
The practical result: a person earning a £60,000 PAYE salary with a side hustle bringing in £10,000 is not automatically in scope — their qualifying income is only £10,000. But a person earning £30,000 freelancing with a buy-to-let generating £25,000 in rent has qualifying income of £55,000, above the threshold.
Worked Examples: Who’s Over the Threshold?
These scenarios show how the combined-income calculation works in practice for the 2026–27 mandate (£50,000 threshold):
| Scenario | Self-employment | Rental income | Qualifying income | MTD mandated 2026? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Freelancer, no property | £55,000 | £0 | £55,000 | Yes |
| Freelancer + rental | £35,000 | £20,000 | £55,000 | Yes |
| Landlord, no self-employment | £0 | £60,000 | £60,000 | Yes |
| PAYE + small side hustle | £8,000 | £0 | £8,000 | No |
| High earner, PAYE only | £0 | £0 | £0 | No |
| Freelancer just under threshold | £28,000 | £18,000 | £46,000 | Not yet (2027: Yes) |
The £35k freelancer + £20k rental income scenario is the most common trap. Neither income stream alone crosses £50,000, so many people assume they’re not in scope — but the combined figure of £55,000 mandates them from April 2026.
How HMRC Determines Your Status: The 2024–25 Return
HMRC assesses your MTD mandate based on your most recent filed Self Assessment tax return. For the April 2026 rollout, that is the 2024–25 return (filed by January 31, 2026).
If your 2024–25 return showed qualifying income above £50,000, HMRC should have written to you in late 2025 or early 2026 confirming you are mandated. The letter specifies your start date and directs you to register for MTD through HMRC’s sign-up service.
What if your income has changed? HMRC’s assessment is based on historical filing, not current-year estimates. If you crossed the threshold in 2024–25 but expect to fall below it in 2025–26, you are still mandated from April 2026 until HMRC reassesses based on your 2025–26 return. You cannot opt out mid-year based on projected lower income.
Conversely, if you were below the threshold in 2024–25 but cross it in 2025–26, you will be mandated from April 2027 (assessed on your 2025–26 return filed by January 2027).
Which Income Streams Count vs Don’t Count: Full Reference
| Income type | Counts toward MTD threshold? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Sole trader / freelance income | Yes — gross receipts | Gross turnover before allowable expenses |
| Rental / property income | Yes — gross rent received | Total rent before mortgage, maintenance, etc. |
| Partnership income | Excluded — for now | MTD for partnerships has a separate, later timeline |
| PAYE salary / employment income | No | Does not count even if primary income source |
| Dividends | No | Company dividends, fund distributions excluded |
| Savings interest | No | Bank interest, ISA interest, bond yields excluded |
| Pension income | No | State pension and private pension income excluded |
| Capital gains | No | Property sale gains, share sale gains excluded |
| Platform economy income (Airbnb, eBay, Etsy) | Yes — if above £1,000 trading allowance | Counts as self-employment income once trading allowance exceeded |
The platform economy row catches many people. If you earn from Airbnb short-term lets, that income is classified as property income for MTD purposes (or trading income if you provide substantial services). If you sell on Etsy or eBay above the £1,000 trading allowance, that’s self-employment income. Both count toward the threshold.
Step-by-Step: How to Calculate Your Qualifying Income
Use your most recently filed Self Assessment return (2024–25) to check your position.
- Find your self-employment income: On your SA103 (Self Assessment: self-employment) return, look at box 9 — “Turnover” — this is your gross receipts before expenses. If you have multiple self-employed trades, add all box 9 figures together.
- Find your property income: On your SA105 (UK property) return, look at box 4 — “Total rents and other income from property” — this is your gross rent received before allowable deductions. Add all property income sources.
- Add the two figures: Self-employment turnover + property income = qualifying income
- Compare to threshold:
- Above £50,000 → mandated from April 6, 2026
- £30,000–£50,000 → mandated from April 6, 2027
- Below £30,000 → not yet mandated (threshold will reach £20,000 in 2028)
If you’re borderline — within a few thousand pounds of the threshold — double-check your calculation and consider whether this year’s income is likely to push you clearly over or under. For the 2027–28 mandate, HMRC will assess based on the 2025–26 return, so current-year income matters for planning.
The £30k Threshold Change in April 2027: Who Gets Caught Next
The current £50,000 threshold was deliberately set high for the initial rollout — HMRC wanted to mandate a smaller, more experienced group first. The plan has always been to lower it progressively:
| Mandate date | Qualifying income threshold | Estimated population in scope |
|---|---|---|
| April 6, 2026 | £50,000+ | ~750,000 people |
| April 6, 2027 | £30,000+ | ~1.5 million people (additional ~750k) |
| April 6, 2028 | £20,000+ | ~3 million people (near-universal for self-employed) |
For mixed-income earners currently between £30,000 and £50,000 qualifying income, April 2027 is the date to plan for. The practical implication: get MTD-compatible software now, build the habit of quarterly record-keeping, and avoid being in a rush when the mandate hits.
If you’re in the £30k–£50k band and haven’t received an HMRC MTD letter yet, that’s expected — HMRC will write when your mandate date approaches. That doesn’t mean you can ignore preparation. The penalties for non-compliance apply from day one of your mandate date.
Software for Managing Mixed Income Streams
The MTD compliance challenge for combined-income earners isn’t the filing itself — it’s that you’re managing two distinct income streams, often with different bookkeeping needs. Rental income has mortgage costs, service charges, void periods, and repairs. Self-employment income has invoices, project expenses, and mileage.
You need software that handles both within a single MTD submission workflow.
| Software | Self-employment support | Property income support | Monthly cost | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FreeAgent | Excellent | Yes — property module | £19/mo (free with NatWest/RBS) | Freelancers with buy-to-let |
| Xero | Excellent | Yes — multiple properties | From £16/mo | Landlords with multiple properties + business income |
| Sage Accounting | Good | Basic | From £15/mo | Established businesses; limited property tools |
| QuickBooks Self-Employed | Good | Poor — sole trader focus | From £10/mo | Sole traders only; not suitable for landlords |
FreeAgent is the strongest option for the typical freelancer-plus-landlord scenario. The property module handles rental income, expense categorisation, and the MTD submission for property income alongside the self-employment submission — all from one platform. It’s free if you bank with NatWest or RBS.
Try FreeAgent free for 30 days — no credit card required during the trial.
For landlords managing multiple properties, Xero’s property tracking is more granular. Xero starts from £16/month with a 30-day free trial.
If you prefer a more hands-on approach with accountant involvement, Sage Accounting and QuickBooks both offer accountant-collaboration features that simplify the year-end review. For a full comparison of all platforms across pricing tiers, features, and MTD capability, see our best accounting software UK 2026 guide.
The Penalty Structure for Non-Compliance
Missing the MTD mandate — failing to register, not using compliant software, or missing quarterly filing deadlines — triggers HMRC’s points-based penalty system.
- 1–3 missed deadlines: 1 penalty point each — no immediate fine, but points accumulate
- 4 penalty points: £200 fine triggered
- Each subsequent missed deadline at 4+ points: Additional £200 per occurrence
- Points expire: After 24 months of full compliance, points reset to zero
For 2026–27, HMRC operates a soft-landing period — penalty points can be appealed on reasonable grounds. This doesn’t mean you can ignore the deadlines; it means a first genuine mistake with a reasonable explanation is recoverable. Don’t bank on the grace period lasting beyond year one.
Separately, late payment penalties apply if your tax bill isn’t settled by January 31 — these are distinct from filing penalties and accrue at Bank of England base rate + 2.5%. See our MTD quarterly filing guide for the full deadline schedule and penalty breakdown.
A Note on the £1,000 Trading and Property Allowances
Two exemptions affect how you calculate qualifying income if your side income is small:
Trading allowance (£1,000/year): If your self-employment gross income is below £1,000, you can claim the trading allowance and pay no tax — and this income does not need to be declared. It also does not count toward your MTD qualifying income threshold.
Property allowance (£1,000/year): The same applies to property income — if gross rent is below £1,000, you can use the property allowance and the income is not declared. Below £1,000, it doesn’t contribute to your qualifying income.
Neither allowance helps if your income is significantly above £1,000 in either category. But for someone with very small amounts from both streams, both allowances can be combined — keeping up to £2,000 of total income exempt from both declaration and the MTD threshold calculation.
What to Do Now: Action Steps by Income Band
Qualifying income above £50,000 (mandated April 2026)
- Confirm your status by reviewing your 2024–25 Self Assessment figures (SA103 + SA105)
- If you haven’t registered for MTD, do so immediately at HMRC’s sign-up service
- Choose MTD-compatible software — FreeAgent or Xero for mixed income
- Connect your bank feeds and categorise transactions from April 6, 2026 onward
- File Q1 by July 31, 2026 — April 6 to July 5 period
Qualifying income £30,000–£50,000 (mandated April 2027)
- You have time, but use it
- Set up your accounting software now — build the quarterly habit before it’s mandatory
- Review your 2025–26 income trajectory — if you’re trending above £50k, you may already be mandated for 2026
- Expect your HMRC mandate letter in late 2026 or early 2027
Qualifying income below £30,000
- You’re not yet in scope under the current timetable (mandate reaches £20k in 2028)
- Monitor your income — if a side hustle or property acquisition pushes you above the relevant threshold, you’ll be mandated on the next rollout date
- Voluntary MTD sign-up is available — useful for building the habit and getting comfortable with the software before it’s compulsory
Common Questions
Does furnished holiday let income count?
Furnished Holiday Letting (FHL) income was historically treated differently from standard rental income for tax purposes. However, the FHL regime was abolished from April 6, 2025, meaning former FHL income is now classified as ordinary property income. It counts toward the MTD qualifying income threshold in the same way as standard residential rental receipts from 2025–26 onward.
What if my rental income fluctuates significantly year to year?
HMRC assesses your mandate based on the return you have filed, not projected future income. If you were above the threshold in 2024–25 but expect lower income in 2025–26, you remain mandated until HMRC reassesses. Write to HMRC if there has been a significant change — a property sold, a trade wound down — and they can adjust your status. Absent that formal notification, the mandate applies until your next return shows you below the threshold.
Does the threshold apply per person or per household?
Per person. For couples who jointly own rental properties, each co-owner reports their share of rental income separately. If a property is jointly owned 50/50, each person reports 50% of the gross rent on their own return. Whether that 50% share, combined with their individual self-employment income, crosses the threshold is assessed individually. Couples don’t pool their incomes for MTD threshold purposes.
Related Guides
See also: Side Hustle Tax UK 2026 · MTD for Income Tax: Complete Guide 2026 · Best Accounting Software UK 2026 · MTD Quarterly Filing Guide 2026
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