This article provides a summary of the long version of the 'Self Employment' page of the Self Assessment tax return and the relevant information required to complete it if you're a sole trader.
Please note that FreeAgent's Self Assessment functionality won't be available if you have an unincorporated landlord account.
Many of these are calculated for you by FreeAgent, and we'll explain how these figures are derived. We'll also show you which boxes FreeAgent calculates provisionally and allows you to edit.
If you're not sure whether any of these figures are correct, particularly the ones that you can edit, speak to an accountant or HMRC, or see HMRC's guidance on the short and long versions of these pages.
Remember: FreeAgent cannot advise you on how to fill in your tax return correctly, nor can we check your figures to see if they are correct, unless they have been calculated by the software. We are not authorised by HMRC to provide accounting or tax advice. If you are in any doubt as to whether a figure on your tax return is right, you need to speak to your accountant or to HMRC.
There are two different versions of the 'Self Employment' pages: the short version and the long version.
Who should use the long version?
If your business is preparing accounts for a full accounting year and your sales during that period were over £85,000, you should use the long version of the 'Self Employment' page. If your sales during that period were under £85,000, you’re usually able to use the short version.
If your business is preparing accounts for less than a full year and your annualised sales were over £85,000, you should also use the long version of the 'Self Employment' page. Annualised sales figures are calculated as a proportion of your sales during the accounting year. If you began trading on 1st January with an accounting year end date of 5th April, for example, and you made £30,000 sales during that time, your annualised sales would be calculated as £30,000 x 12/3 = £120,000.
If you are using the averaging method for farmers, market gardeners, writers and artists or if you have overlap profits (i.e. profits that the business pays tax on twice) you will have to complete the long version of the 'Self Employment' form.
You will also need to use the long version of the ‘Self Employment’ page if you received self-isolation support payments from the government due to coronavirus and treated these as part of your business’s income. These payments are subject to NI but not to tax, and there is a box you need to use to adjust your profits which can only be found on the long version of the ‘Self Employment’ page.
FreeAgent will pick the short or the long version for you based on two criteria. If you’re including figures for less than a year on your ‘Self Employment’ page, FreeAgent will pick the long version for you. If you’re including figures for a full year, FreeAgent will choose the version depending on your turnover. If you want, or need, to fill in the long version, you can switch at the top of the page.
An overview of the long version of the 'Self Employment' page in FreeAgent
FreeAgent fills in the boxes on the 'Self Employment' page by taking data from the transactions that you've recorded: invoices, bills, bank entries, expenses, and so on. If you need to make any changes to these, then you should either make changes to individual transactions or create journal entries.
Income
Box 15 is for turnover - income the business has earned during the year, excluding bank interest, which goes in the Main Return.
Recording coronavirus support grants
If you received any coronavirus support grants during your accounting year and explained these in FreeAgent as ‘Other Money In’ and ‘Grant Income’, enter the amount you received in the box below box 15. This will subtract the grants from your turnover.
To see how much you received as coronavirus support grant income to enter in the box below box 15, navigate to the ‘Accounting’ tab, select ‘Reports’, then ‘Show Transactions’. Next, select the correct accounting year and choose ‘Grant Income’. Add up all of the coronavirus grants to calculate your grant income total.
To record your grant income, you will then need to enter the total for any coronavirus support grants that you received and were entitled to receive, other than SEISS ones, in box 16. If you received more than you were entitled to, and haven’t yet told HMRC, you need to report the overclaim on your Main Return. This is the figure you need to pay back, in full, to HMRC.
Next, enter any coronavirus support payments for SEISS in box 70.1. The government paid out five SEISS grants and they have advised that box 70.1 for 2020/21 should contain any payments you received, and were entitled to receive, for these in that year.
Please note that if your accounting year does not finish on 5th April, or if you received more than you were entitled to, this may mean that the figure you enter in the box under box 15 and the figure you enter in box 70.1 are not the same.
If you received more in coronavirus support grants than you were entitled to receive, and haven’t yet told HMRC about this, you need to report the overclaim on your Main Return.
Amounts entered in box 16 and box 70.1 are included in your profit for tax calculation.
Costs
Boxes 17-30 show the total business expenses, both allowable and disallowable, in the different categories. You can view or edit the accounting categories you have set up in FreeAgent in your account settings.
To see how FreeAgent has calculated the figures in any of these boxes, filter the Show Transactions report by tax reporting type to see the individual transactions that make up these figures.
If an expense is 'disallowable', that means it's not allowable for tax relief, i.e. as a sole trader you can't use that expense to reduce the amount of profit that you pay tax on. An allowable expense is one that can be used to reduce the amount of profit that's going to be subject to tax.
Box 31 is the sum total of boxes 17-30.
Boxes 32-45 show the disallowable expenses in the different categories. If you need to disallow certain expenses, such as some legal fees, you need to set up a new category for these and tag that category as disallowable. Some categories, such as Business Entertaining and Depreciation, are tagged as disallowable by default.
Capital allowances
Boxes 49-59 show capital allowances. There are complex rules governing what you can claim for different assets, which may be based on information that isn't recorded in FreeAgent. If you're not sure what figure you can claim here, talk to your accountant.
Losses
The rest of the boxes on the 'Self Employment' page tend to be summations (see below for guidance on basis periods and overlap profits), except for boxes 73, 74 and 77-80, which relate to losses.
The basic principle is that if you make a loss for tax purposes in any one year (i.e. if your allowable expenses plus capital allowances, outweighs your income), you may well be able to use that loss to reduce your tax bill in some way.
You may be able to set the loss against other income you've received in the same year (e.g. salary from a job) and claim back tax you've already paid; you may be able to carry the loss back against profits from previous years; or you can carry the loss forward to set against future profits from that trade.
Using a loss to reduce your tax bill is called 'loss relief'. The rules around when each kind of loss relief can be used are complex, especially as losses can be treated differently for tax and National Insurance. If you've made a loss and you're not sure how you can claim relief on it, speak to your accountant.
FreeAgent will make a provisional calculation for you of losses from earlier years, which it will then bring into the memo under box 73.
It assumes you're carrying all your losses forward. If your accountant advises you as such, you can claim loss relief by making entries into box 78 or 79. Fill these in as directed by your accountant.
A business that makes losses in its early years of trading can only receive loss relief on any pound of loss once. But if it makes profits in its early years of trading, and doesn't have a year end of 31st March, 5th April, or anything in between (1st-4th April), it can end up paying tax twice on the same profit. Profits that the business pays tax on twice are called overlap profits.
Most sole traders prepare their accounts to 5th April each year, to match the tax year. HMRC also treats accounts that end on 31st March or on any of the intervening days as being prepared to match the tax year. So if you prepare your accounts to any day between and including 31st March and 5th April, you can stop reading this now - overlap profits do not apply to you!
BUT if your business does not prepare accounts to any of these dates, for example if you use 31st December as your business's year end, then its profits can sometimes be taxed twice.
The classic situation where this will happen is in the early years of your business's life. HMRC gives examples of the calculations for which profits will be taxed twice in that case.
Put the opening and closing dates of your basis period into boxes 66 and 67, if they're different from your accounting period, and add any adjustment between the profit of your accounting period and basis period into box 68. Your basis period is the period on whose profits you pay tax. It will usually match your accounting period but in some cases - such as in the early years of your business - it doesn't.
If you have overlap profits to use up this year, you'll need to put these into box 69. We're not supporting this box yet, so unfortunately you won't be able to file your return through FreeAgent if this applies to you. Talk to your accountant if you're not sure.
Any overlap profits to be carried forward - that haven't been used up - go into box 70. Again your accountant should be able to advise here.
You shouldn't need to fill in boxes 71 or 72 unless your accountant tells you to.
CIS deductions
If you are a subcontractor in the construction industry, put into box 81 the tax which was taken off your earnings by your contractors. This is because HMRC takes this tax into account when working out how much tax you should pay this year - it counts as part of your tax bill, so if you miss it out you'll pay too much tax.
Balance sheet
The balance sheet boxes, 83-99, are optional. They won't affect the amount of tax you pay, so the choice is yours whether to fill in these boxes.
Class 4 National Insurance exemption
Most sole traders have to pay class 4 National Insurance contributions (NICs), but if you are under 16, over state pension age or not resident in the UK for tax purposes as at the start of the tax year in question, you are exempt from paying class 4 NICs. If this applies to you, select 'Yes' to question 37.
You may sometimes need to adjust the profits on which you're paying class 4 NICs (e.g. if you've used a loss to claim back some tax, and the loss is still available) to save you class 4 National Insurance. Check with your accountant to find out whether this applies to you.
You’ll also need to adjust the profits on which you’re paying class 4 NICs if you received a self-isolation support payment for coronavirus. See below for more information on this.
Class 2 National Insurance
If your self-employed profits are over the Lower Profits Limit (or Small Profits Threshold for tax years 2021/22 and earlier), you have to pay Class 2 National Insurance contributions (NICs). Class 2 NICs are usually a flat rate per contribution week or partial contribution week that you're in self-employment (unless you're a share fisherman).
A contribution week is defined as a period of seven days starting from a Sunday (just after midnight) to the following Saturday (just before midnight), so if you started self-employment on Saturday 11th February 2023, for example, you would be liable for Class 2 NICs from Sunday 5th February 2023. If you began self-employment on Sunday 12th February 2023 however, you would be liable for Class 2 NICs from that Sunday.
Once your Class 2 NIC liability has been established, it will continue for as long as you are ordinarily self-employed. This means that you will still remain liable for Class 2 NICs during holiday weeks, weeks when you do not do any self-employed work and weeks when you do not earn anything from self-employment.
If you cease self-employment, your liability to pay Class 2 NICs will end on the Saturday of the week in which you ceased to be self-employed. For example, if you gave up self-employment on Thursday 9th March 2023, for example, your liability would have ended on Saturday 11th March 2023 and you would still have had to pay Class 2 NICs for that whole week.
HMRC guidance advises to include 53 weeks worth of contributions unless the tax year lasts 52 weeks to the day, which 2022/23 does not. If your self-employment profits are over the Small Profits Threshold, FreeAgent will automatically calculate your Class 2 NI liability for you based on 53 weeks, as shown below. However, you can override this amount if you know it to be incorrect (i.e. if you have been self-employed for fewer than 53 weeks during the tax year).
If your self-employment profits are below the Small Profits Threshold you can still volunteer to pay Class 2 NICs. If you want to do this, select ‘Yes’ in the section shown above and FreeAgent will calculate the amount you owe based on 53 contribution weeks.
If you received any support payments relating to self-isolation due to coronavirus (Covid-19), enter these in box 102, ‘Adjustment to profits chargeable to Class 4 National Insurance contributions’.