Self Assessment Checklist
Self Assessment isn’t difficult, but it is unforgiving if you’re missing a document, a date, or a figure. One small oversight can lead to penalties, interest, or an unexpected tax bill.
This Self Assessment checklist is designed to help UK taxpayers get everything gathered, calculated, and submitted cleanly without last-minute stress or January panic. Whether you’re self-employed, a landlord, a company director, or earning extra income on the side, this guide walks you through exactly what you need, step by step.
Bookmark it, download it, or work through it gradually – future you will be grateful.
Key Self Assessment Deadlines to Keep in Mind
- Paper tax return deadline: 31 October following the end of the tax year
- Online tax return deadline: 31 January following the end of the tax year
- Balancing payment deadline: 31 January (same day as online filing)
- Second payment on account (if applicable): 31 July
You can always check the latest deadlines directly on the official HMRC guidance page: Self Assessment deadlines on GOV.UK.
Step 1: Confirm You Actually Need to File a Self Assessment Return
Before gathering documents or logging into HMRC’s online system, the first (and most important) step is confirming whether you actually need to submit a Self Assessment tax return.
You must usually file a Self Assessment return if HMRC has asked you to, and/or you have income that isn’t fully taxed at source. This commonly includes:
- Self-employed or freelance income
- Rental income from UK or overseas property
- Dividends or investment income above allowances
- Capital Gains Tax liabilities
- Partnership income
- Foreign income
- High Income Child Benefit Charge situations
You can check HMRC’s official criteria here: Check if you need to send a Self Assessment tax return
Important: If HMRC issues you with a notice to file, you are legally required to submit a return – even if you believe there is no tax to pay.
If You Used to File but Think You No Longer Need To
Many people assume that Self Assessment stops automatically when their circumstances change. Unfortunately, it doesn’t.
If you previously filed a return but no longer meet the criteria, you should:
- Check your HMRC online account
- Confirm whether a notice to file has been issued for the current tax year
- Contact HMRC or speak to a qualified accountant to have the requirement withdrawn
Why this matters: Failing to submit a return after HMRC has requested one can trigger automatic penalties – even if no tax is ultimately due.
Pro tip: If you believe you no longer need to file, deal with it early. Once the 31 January deadline passes, penalties apply automatically and are harder to reverse.
Step 2: The “Gather Everything” Self Assessment Checklist
Before you even open your Self Assessment return, take the time to gather everything you’ll need. This one step alone prevents most mistakes, delays, and last-minute scrambles.
Aim: have all relevant documents to hand so you can complete your return accurately in one sitting.
Personal & Administrative Details
- National Insurance number
- Unique Taxpayer Reference (UTR) and HMRC login details
- Your address history (if you moved during the tax year)
- Bank account details (for any tax refund)
Tip: If you can’t find your UTR, recover it using HMRC’s UTR recovery service
Income Documents (Only What Applies to You)
Employment Income
- P60 (end of year summary)
- P45 (if you left a job during the year)
- P11D for benefits in kind (company car, private medical insurance, etc.)
HMRC guidance on taxable employment income
Self-Employment / Sole Trader Income
- Total sales income (invoices, card payments, cash takings)
- Business bank statements
- CIS statements (if you’re a subcontractor in construction)
- Clear summary of allowable business expenses
Helpful resource: Allowable expenses for self-employed
Pro tip: HMRC focuses heavily on turnover accuracy. Make sure cash and card income are both included.
Property & Rental Income
- Total rental income received
- Letting agent statements
- Mortgage interest and finance cost statements
- Repair and maintenance invoices
Savings & Investments
- Bank and building society interest statements
- Dividend vouchers or tax certificates
- Investment platform annual tax summaries (if provided)
Reminder: Even if no tax is due because of allowances, this income may still need to be reported.
Pensions & State Benefits
- Private or workplace pension income statements
- State benefit letters (where relevant)
Taxable and non-taxable state benefits
Other Income & Gains
- Foreign income documentation (if applicable)
- Cryptoasset transaction or disposal summaries
- Capital Gains Tax calculations for sold assets, shares, or property
Pro tip: Crypto and investment platforms often provide downloadable tax summaries – use them to avoid manual errors.
Step 3: Expenses and Reliefs Checklist (The Money-Saving Section)
This is where Self Assessment can really work in your favour. Claiming the right expenses and reliefs – correctly – can significantly reduce your tax bill. Miss them, and you could end up paying more tax than you need to.
Key principle: HMRC allows deductions where costs are incurred “wholly and exclusively” for business purposes.
Official guidance: HMRC allowable expenses rules
Self-Employed: Allowable Expenses (Quick Categories)
Review each category carefully and include only genuine business-related costs.
- Office costs: phone bills, stationery, postage, printer ink, software subscriptions
- Travel: business mileage, parking, train fares (not commuting)
- Staff and subcontractors: wages, freelancers, agency costs
- Stock and raw materials: items purchased for resale or production
- Insurance and bank charges: public liability, professional indemnity, business account fees
- Premises costs: rent, utilities, business rates, cleaning
Simplified expenses guidance (flat-rate options)
Common pitfall: Claiming personal costs or commuting expenses – these are not allowable and can trigger HMRC queries.
Working From Home: Don’t Miss This Claim
If you work from home, you may be able to claim a proportion of household costs, provided the claim is reasonable, consistent, and justifiable.
You can claim for:
- Utilities (gas, electricity, water)
- Broadband and phone usage
- Council tax (proportion)
HMRC offers a simplified flat-rate method or an actual cost method: Working from home tax relief
Pro tip: Choose one method and stick to it year-on-year unless your circumstances change.
Other Reliefs to Double-Check
These reliefs are often overlooked but can make a meaningful difference.
- Pension contributions: Personal pension payments can extend your basic rate band and reduce higher-rate tax exposure
- Gift Aid donations: Charitable giving may increase your tax relief entitlement
- Marriage Allowance: If one spouse earns below the personal allowance
- Trading losses: Especially important if you had a poor year or are newly self-employed
Pro tip: Trading losses can sometimes be carried back or offset against other income – an area where professional advice often pays for itself.










