Freelancer accountants · UK-wide

Accountants for freelancers UK.

Self-assessment, expense optimisation, when to incorporate, IR35 awareness, VAT threshold monitoring. Named accountant. From £100/month.

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What freelancers need from an accountant

An accountant for freelancers handles more than the annual tax return. They advise on structure (sole trader vs limited company), expense maximisation, IR35 risk, VAT registration timing, and MTD compliance. Most freelancers wait until they have a problem — the best ones engage early and make the structure decision correctly from the start.

Freelancer accountant — FAQs

Do freelancers need an accountant?

Not legally — but most freelancers earning above £30,000–£40,000 benefit from professional help. The key areas: maximising allowable expense claims, deciding when to incorporate to a limited company, IR35 awareness if working for a single client, VAT registration when approaching £90,000 [VERIFY], and MTD Income Tax from April 2026 above £50,000 gross [VERIFY]. A specialist pays for itself through one well-advised decision per year.

What can a freelancer claim against tax?

Common freelancer allowable expenses: home office (fixed rate or actual costs), professional subscriptions, software and tools, equipment (capital allowances), business travel, training directly related to current work, accountancy fees, professional indemnity insurance, and a proportion of phone and internet costs. [VERIFY current rules at gov.uk]

Should I be a sole trader or limited company as a freelancer?

Sole trader is simpler. Limited company is usually more tax-efficient at £30,000–£40,000+ profit. The key factors: your profit level, IR35 risk (if you work predominantly for one client), whether you need personal liability protection, and how you want to extract income. We model both structures for every freelancer client before recommending.

What is IR35 and does it affect freelancers?

IR35 applies if you work through a limited company and your relationship with a client resembles employment. For freelancers who work with multiple clients on project terms — with genuine substitution rights and control over how they work — IR35 is less likely to apply. But if you work exclusively with one client in a way that looks like employment, it's a risk. We review every engagement before structure decisions.

How much does a freelancer accountant cost?

At RR Accountants, freelancer accountancy starts from £100/month for sole traders or from £150/month for limited company freelancers. Self-assessment only from £200 as a one-off. Exact fee confirmed after your discovery call.

Freelancer accountant. Book a call.

20 minutes. Fee in writing.

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Iftikhar Rashid FCCA · UK-wide · 16 years in practice