MTD Income Tax · for Google Sheets™

Your tax records live in a spreadsheet. Now your HMRC filing does too.

SheetMTD is a Google Sheets add-on for Making Tax Digital for Income Tax. Keep your records where they've always been, and submit your quarterly update to HMRC from a sidebar — no new software to learn, no uploading files to yet another website.

A ready-made Google Sheets template for landlords and sole traders, pre-built with the categories HMRC expects — plus one email when SheetMTD opens for the next deadline. No spam, unsubscribe any time.

Done — check your inbox. The template link is on its way.

Made for the people MTD actually hit

Since 6 April 2026, sole traders and landlords earning over £50,000 must keep digital records and file quarterly. The threshold falls to £30,000 in 2027 and £20,000 in 2028. If your records are a spreadsheet that already works, you shouldn't have to abandon it.

01Keep your sheet

Create a record template in your own Google Sheet — date, description, category, amount. Categories match HMRC's self-employment and property boxes, validated as you type.

02See what's due

The sidebar shows the quarter you're in, the records it contains, and a countdown to the filing deadline. Reminder emails before every deadline, four times a year.

03Submit from the sidebar

One click reads your figures — by formula, the digital link HMRC requires — shows you exactly what will be sent, and files your quarterly update. Receipt stored.

Pricing that respects a spreadsheet budget

Record-keeping

£0 forever
  • Self-employment & UK property templates
  • HMRC-matched categories with validation
  • Deadline countdown & reminders

Filing

£24.99 / year
  • Everything in free
  • Quarterly submissions to HMRC
  • All four quarters, both income types
  • Submission receipts kept for your records

Built by a CIMA-qualified accountant. SheetMTD is bridging software for MTD for Income Tax; HMRC recognition listing in progress. Google Sheets is a trademark of Google LLC; SheetMTD is not affiliated with Google or HMRC.