Under 10% Signed Up for MTD ITSA: HMRC's Digital Dream Is Turning Into the Taxpayer's Worst Nightmare – And They're Still Forcing It Down Our Throats
Greetings, you reluctant guinea pigs. Here we are in March 2026, just weeks away from the April 6 start date for Making Tax Digital for Income Tax Self Assessment (MTD ITSA), and the latest figures are in: fewer than 10% of the first mandatory cohort have actually signed up and joined the digital hellscape. Less than one in ten of the roughly 700,000–800,000 sole traders and landlords earning £50,000+ gross from self-employment or property have bothered (or managed) to register for MTD ITSA.
Let that sink in. HMRC has spent years (and billions of our money) hyping this as the greatest thing since sliced bread – quarterly digital updates, real-time tax estimates, better cashflow planning, closing the tax gap, blah blah blah. They've delayed it multiple times, thrown soft landings at new joiners, and still the uptake is pathetic. Under 10%. That's not "slow start"; that's a mass boycott by apathy and terror.
Why the ghost town?
- Nobody trusts HMRC's tech – The same clowns who crash on deadline day, lose your records, issue £2.8bn phantom demands to corner shops, and can't answer a phone without an hour of Vivaldi torture expect you to link your bank feeds, categorise every receipt quarterly, and trust their portals won't eat your data? Pull the other one.
- It's extra work for zero benefit – You still pay tax annually (or twice with payments on account). The "real-time estimate" is just another screen you have to check. Quarterly summaries mean four deadlines instead of one, software costs (£8–£30/month for QuickBooks/Xero etc.), endless receipt scanning, and the looming threat of penalty points if you slip. For what? So HMRC gets live surveillance on your finances? Cheers, but no thanks.
- The software is a minefield – Even the "simple" bridging tools are clunky, bank feeds fail, categorisation rules are a moving target, and if your setup is slightly non-standard (partnerships delayed, mixed income, overseas property), good luck finding compatible kit without paying through the nose.
- Fear of the unknown – Pensioners, older landlords, and low-tech sole traders are staring at this like it's alien technology. Forums are full of "I'm not doing it until they force me" posts. Many are gambling on HMRC's legendary enforcement sloth – miss the first few updates, see what happens.
- They've been caught lying about the numbers before – HMRC's own cost-benefit forecasts have been revised downward repeatedly. Original revenue windfall promises slashed, compliance costs ballooned to £1.4bn+. Taxpayers smell a rat: this isn't about helping us; it's about control and eventual mandatory payments-on-account creep.
And what’s HMRC's response to this resounding "no thanks"? Crickets, vague press releases about "strong progress" (under 10% is strong?), and quiet threats that non-sign-ups will eventually get auto-enrolled or penalty-pointed into submission. Reeves still bangs on about "modernising the tax system" while her department hires 1,000 valuation officers for the mansion tax raid and lets Rayner's stamp duty probe drag on forever.
This pathetic signup rate is the clearest signal yet: MTD ITSA is not wanted, not needed, and not trusted. It's a solution looking for a problem, built by people who can't run their own organisation without half a million sick days a year. The first cohort is voting with their feet – or rather, with their inaction.
But forcing quarterly digital shackles on people who can't even be arsed to sign up? That's not taxing – that's tyranny by admin, and right now, the peasants aren't having it.
Amazon "MTD Boycott Starter Pack" Suggestions
(affiliate links – because resistance needs supplies)
- "Not Signing Up Until They Drag Me" Mug – morning motivation
- External Hard Drive – backup your records the old-fashioned way
- Noise-Cancelling Headphones – for ignoring HMRC webinars
- Shredder – for when the mandatory nudge letters start arriving
- Strong Black Coffee – fuel for the inevitable last-minute panic (if any)
Tax does have to be taxing.
HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"




