Self-Assessment Tax Return Services Across the UK
Filing your self-assessment tax return shouldn’t feel like it does. Most people don’t struggle because they’ve done something wrong. They struggle because no one ever properly explained how any of this works. That’s where we come in.
Who we help with self-assessment
Self-employed / sole traders
Company directors
Buy-to-let landlords
Freelancers & consultants
Higher earners (over £100k)
People with investment income
Those with overseas income
Anyone behind on previous years
Never a missed deadline
Not just filed — optimised
You understand what's happening
Not just at January deadline
How Self-Assessment Tax Works — And Why It Affects You
Think of it this way. If you’re employed and your employer handles your tax through payroll, the government already knows roughly what you earned and what you owe. Neat and tidy. But the moment income starts coming from other places — a business you run, a property you let, investments, dividends — the picture gets more complicated, and HMRC needs you to fill in the gaps.
A Self-Assessment tax return is simply your way of saying: here’s everything I earned this year, from every source. Here’s what I’m entitled to deduct. Here’s what I owe — or what you owe me back.
It’s not a test. It’s not a trap. It’s a conversation with the tax authority — and like any conversation, it goes better when you know what you’re talking about.
The challenge is that the form itself is built for every possible situation — which makes it feel overwhelming even when your own situation is perfectly straightforward. Our job is to cut through all of that and focus on what actually applies to you.
Your employer deducts income tax and National Insurance before you're paid. HMRC knows what you earned. Nothing to declare — unless you have other income too.
Any income outside of PAYE — self-employment, rental, investments, overseas — needs to be declared. You file a return. HMRC calculates what's owed or refunded.
A self-assessment tax return is simply your way of saying: here’s everything I earned this year, from every source. Here’s what I’m entitled to deduct. Here’s what I owe — or what you owe me back.
Who Needs To File A Self-Assessment Tax Return?
More people need to file a self-assessment tax return than you’d think — and many don’t realise it until it’s too late. You might need to file a Self-Assessment if any of these sound familiar:
You Work For Yourself
Freelancer, consultant, sole trader — if you invoice clients and keep the money, you’re responsible for your own tax. That means filing every year, declaring your income and claiming allowable expenses.
You Rent Out A Property
A flat, a house, even a spare room. Rental income needs to be declared — but so do the costs that can legally reduce your bill. Most landlords under-claim without realising it.
You Earn From Investments
Dividends from shares, interest from savings accounts, or gains from selling assets — all of it can trigger a filing requirement, depending on the amounts involved.
Your Income Is Higher
Once your earnings cross a certain level, your tax-free allowance starts to shrink — and at £100,000, it disappears entirely. Planning ahead here can make a real difference to what you owe.
You Have Income From Abroad
Working remotely, earning from overseas accounts, or owning property abroad. If you’re a UK tax resident, this all comes into the picture — whether or not you’ve been taxed overseas.
You Receive Child Benefit
If either you or your partner earns above a threshold, some or all of the Child Benefit may need to be repaid through your tax return. Many families aren’t aware of this until it becomes a problem.
Not sure if you need to file? That’s one of the first things we help you figure out — and it’s a conversation, not a questionnaire. Tell us where you are and we’ll take it from there.
What Happens If You Miss The HMRC Self-Assessment Deadline?
We’re not here to frighten anyone. But this is worth saying plainly, because a lot of people assume that if they just don’t file, nothing will happen. That’s rarely true.
Miss the filing deadline and HMRC issues an automatic penalty — no warning, no second chance. Leave it longer and daily charges begin to stack up. Leave it longer still and those charges compound, alongside interest on any unpaid tax, until what might have been a manageable bill becomes something significantly harder to deal with.
Beyond the financial cost, there’s the mental weight of it. The worry that sits quietly in the background. The nagging sense that you should have done something by now. We see it often — clients who’ve been putting something off for a year, sometimes two, who come to us dreading the worst and leave with a clear plan and a weight lifted.
The truth is that HMRC would rather you came forward and got it sorted than hid from it. And so would we. Whatever your situation — late, complicated, or just uncertain — there is always a way through. We’ve helped people in far messier situations than yours, and we’ll help you too.
Issued immediately on the day after the deadline. No warning. No exception for "I forgot" or "I didn't know I had to."
Add back: disallowable expenses, depreciation. Deduct: capital allowances. Apply: loss relief, R&D claims, other reliefs.
Whichever is higher. Interest also runs on any unpaid tax from the original payment deadline.
Serious cases can attract penalties up to 100% of the tax due. HMRC has extensive powers to investigate.
Already late? It’s not too late to get help. We’ve helped clients who’ve been behind for years. The route back to compliance is almost always navigable — and the sooner you start, the simpler it is. Come with the problem. We’ll sort it out together.
Meet Someone Who Felt Exactly Like You Might Feel Right Now
Two real situations. Two different people. Both left wondering why nobody had explained this sooner.
She’d left her corporate job mid-year and started consulting on her own. The work was going well. The tax side of things? She’d been quietly avoiding thinking about it. By October she had a growing folder of invoices and a vague anxiety that she’d done something wrong — or missed something she should have done.
When she came to us, we started by just listening. What had she earned? What had she spent on the business? What did she have records of, and what was missing? We helped her register with HMRC, organised her records, identified expenses she hadn’t thought to claim — her phone, her software subscriptions, a portion of her home setup — and filed everything accurately and on time.
Her tax bill was lower than she’d feared. More importantly, she understood exactly why. And the following year, she came back — records already organised, questions already forming — because she’d learned that getting on top of this stuff early makes everything easier.
“I wish I’d done this from day one. The fear was so much worse than the reality.”
He’d been renting out a flat for two years and dutifully declaring the rental income alongside his salary. What he hadn’t done was claim any of the costs he was perfectly entitled to — the letting agent’s fees, the boiler repair, the insurance, the furniture he’d replaced. He’d been overpaying without knowing it.
We went back through his records, identified everything that could be claimed, and amended his returns. Then we set him up properly going forward — a simple system for tracking costs throughout the year so that nothing gets missed again. What had felt like a burdensome extra form was suddenly something he felt in control of.
“I wish I’d done this from day one. The fear was so much worse than the reality.”
Sound familiar? Let’s talk. Tell us where you are and we’ll take it from there. No jargon, no judgement — just a straightforward conversation.
A Return Isn't Just What You Owe. It's Also Everything You're Entitled To.
The tax system isn’t designed to take as much as possible. It’s built with reliefs, allowances, and deductions woven into it — for pensions, for charitable giving, for business costs, for investment in growing companies. Most people don’t claim everything they could, not because they’re dishonest, but because they didn’t know to ask.
When we prepare your return, we’re not just filling in boxes. We’re asking: have you claimed everything you’re entitled to? Is there anything you did this year — a contribution, a donation, a purchase — that could change the outcome? Are there decisions still to make before the tax year closes that would make a meaningful difference?
The difference between a return that’s filed and a return that’s optimised is often just someone who knows what questions to ask.
That’s what we bring. Not complexity — clarity. And a genuine interest in making sure your outcome is the best it can legally be.
Both personal and employer contributions can reduce your tax bill — often more than people realise
Gift Aid donations allow basic rate tax to be reclaimed — and higher rate taxpayers can claim additional relief
For self-employed individuals, every legitimate business expense reduces your taxable profit — equipment, travel, subscriptions and more
Letting agent fees, insurance, repairs, furniture — all potentially deductible against rental income
Income declared. Basic figures entered. Submitted on time. Nothing obviously wrong — but no one asked what could be claimed, what could be timed differently, or what the picture looks like next year.
- VS
Every eligible expense identified. Every allowance reviewed. Pension timing considered. Marriage allowance checked. Gift Aid included. The tax bill is as low as the law permits — and the director understands why.
“The difference between a return that’s filed and a return that’s optimised is often just someone who knows what questions to ask. That’s what we bring — not complexity, but clarity.”
How Our Self-Assessment Tax Return Service Works
We don’t hand you a long form and disappear. Here’s what working with us actually looks like:
We Start With A Conversation
Tell us about your year — your income, your situation, any changes. We listen properly, because the details that seem ordinary to you are often the ones that matter most to us. This conversation shapes everything that follows.
We Look For Everything You're Entitled To
Have you claimed everything you could? A pension contribution, a donation, a purchase — anything that could change the outcome. We ask the questions most people don't know to ask, because we know what the tax system makes available.
We Prepare It With Precision
Accuracy matters. Every figure reviewed, every calculation checked, every deduction properly documented. Not just filed — built carefully so it's both correct and defensible if HMRC ever looks more closely.
We Explain It Before We File It
You'll know what's in your return and why, before it goes anywhere. We don't file on behalf of clients who don't understand what they're signing off on. The explanation is part of the service — not an optional extra.
We Stay Available All Year
We're not a January-only service. We're available throughout the year — for questions, for planning conversations, and for making sure that when next year's return comes around, you're already in the best possible position.
I've never filed before. Where do I even start?
I'm already late. Is it too late to get help?
What do I actually need to bring or send you?
How long does the whole process take?
Will you just file it, or will I understand what's happening??
“Friendly, qualified, and always on your side. We’ll take the weight of it off your shoulders, make sure nothing is missed, and make sure you understand exactly where you stand. That’s Shreem.”
Looking ahead
Making Tax Digital: What's Changing And How We Prepare You
The way tax returns work in the UK is going through one of its biggest shifts in a generation. HMRC is moving towards a system — Making Tax Digital for Income Tax — where many self-employed people and landlords will need to submit updates quarterly, not just once a year. The thresholds will roll out gradually, but the direction of travel is clear.
For some, this sounds like more admin. For our clients, it’s already handled. We help you set up the right systems, maintain your records properly throughout the year, and manage submissions as they fall due. When the changes arrive, there’s nothing to scramble for — because the groundwork is already done.
That’s the real promise we make: not just compliance today, but readiness for whatever comes next.
Business mileage on personal vehicle, home office portion, phone with personal and business use, mixed-use equipment
Professional subscriptions, software licences, accountancy fees, business insurance, dedicated office rent
Free Initial Consultation
Ready To Take The Stress Out Of Your
Self-Assessment?
Whether you’re filing for the first time, untangling a complicated year, or simply tired of doing it alone every January — we’re here. We’ll take the weight of it off your shoulders, make sure nothing is missed, and make sure you understand exactly where you stand.
Friendly, qualified, and always on your side. That’s Shreem.
Your Wider Financial Picture
Self-Assessment Is One Part Of A Bigger Financial Picture
Your self-assessment return connects to other parts of your tax and financial life. We handle all of them under one roof.
Corporate Tax Returns
If you’re a director, your company’s corporation tax and your personal self-assessment are part of the same picture — and work best when handled together.
Accounting & Bookkeeping
Good bookkeeping throughout the year makes self-assessment preparation straightforward — and means nothing gets missed at return time.
VAT Returns & Advice
For self-employed individuals and sole traders who are VAT-registered — or approaching the threshold — handled alongside your self-assessment.
Annual Statutory Accounts
If you run a limited company, the annual accounts feed directly into the corporation tax return — and both connect to your personal tax position.
Company Formation
Thinking of going limited? The decision affects both your corporation tax and your personal self-assessment. Getting the structure right from the start matters.
Explore →
Payroll Services
For self-employed individuals who also employ staff — payroll connects directly to your tax picture and your self-assessment position.
Common Questions
FAQs About Self-Assessment Tax Return Services in the UK
Who actually needs to complete a self-assessment tax return?
You need to file if you’re self-employed, a company director, have income over £100,000, receive rental income, have foreign income, or have significant savings or investment income. We check your situation and confirm whether filing is required.
What is the deadline for submitting my self-assessment return?
Paper returns must be filed by 31 October; online returns by 31 January following the tax year end. You also need to pay any tax owed by 31 January. Missing these dates triggers automatic penalties.
I'm employed but also do freelance work on the side — do I need to self-assess?
Yes, if your self-employed income exceeds £1,000 in a tax year you must register for self-assessment and declare that income. We ensure both your employment and freelance income are reported correctly.
What can I claim as an expense if I'm self-employed?
Allowable expenses include costs that are wholly and exclusively for business — tools, equipment, professional subscriptions, travel, advertising, and home office costs. We go through your situation in detail to identify every legitimate claim.
What is the marriage allowance and how do I know if I'm eligible?
If one partner earns below the personal allowance and the other is a basic rate taxpayer, you can transfer up to £1,260 of personal allowance between you, saving up to £252 per year. We check whether you qualify and apply it correctly.
I've received a tax return from HMRC but I don't think I owe anything — do I still need to file?
If HMRC has issued you a notice to file, you must submit a return even if your liability is nil. Ignoring it results in penalties. We can file a nil return and, where appropriate, request removal from the system going forward.
I have rental income — what costs can I offset against it?
You can offset mortgage interest (subject to restrictions), letting agent fees, maintenance costs, insurance, and certain professional fees. The rules on mortgage interest relief changed significantly from 2020, and we ensure you’re applying the current rules correctly.
What is payment on account and why am I being asked to pay tax in July?
If your tax bill exceeds £1,000, HMRC asks you to make advance payments — called payments on account — towards the following year’s liability. These are split between January and July. We help you understand what’s due and whether you can reduce them.
I've missed previous years' tax returns — can they still be filed?
Yes, late returns can still be submitted, and it’s always better to file than to leave it outstanding. Penalties have already accrued, but filing promptly prevents further charges. We bring your returns up to date and deal with HMRC on your behalf.
What happens if I made a mistake on a return I already filed?
You can amend a self-assessment return within 12 months of the original filing deadline. Beyond that, we can write to HMRC to correct the record. We review past returns where clients suspect errors.
I inherited money or sold an investment — do I need to declare it?
Inheritances are generally not subject to income tax, but the estate’s executor may have IHT obligations. If you’ve sold shares or property at a profit, Capital Gains Tax may apply. We determine what needs to be reported and what doesn’t.
How does the high income child benefit charge work?
If you or your partner earn over £60,000 and claim Child Benefit, you may need to pay some or all of it back through the tax return. We calculate the charge and advise on whether it’s worth continuing to receive Child Benefit.
Can I include pension contributions to reduce my tax bill?
Yes — personal pension contributions receive tax relief. Higher and additional rate taxpayers can claim additional relief through self-assessment. We ensure you’re claiming your full entitlement.
I've been living abroad for part of the year — does that affect my UK tax position?
Residence status significantly affects your UK tax obligations. The Statutory Residence Test has detailed rules about days spent in the UK and ties to the country. We assess your status carefully to ensure you pay the right amount — and no more.
How far back can HMRC go if they believe I've underpaid tax?
HMRC can generally go back four years for innocent errors, six years for careless mistakes, and up to 20 years in cases of deliberate behaviour. We ensure your records and returns are robust enough to withstand scrutiny.
No Jargon. No Judgement. Just Help.
Your Self-Assessment, Handled Properly.
Whether you’re filing for the first time, untangling a complicated year, or simply tired of the annual January stress — we’re here. We’ll take the weight of it off your shoulders, make sure nothing is missed, and make sure you understand exactly where you stand.
