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Public United Kingdom Author: Ema Stamenković
HMRC plans to modernize UK tax and customs systems by 2030, focusing on improving daily processes, closing the tax gap, and updating core systems. E-invoicing is a central pillar, and the Making Tax Digital initiative will expand.
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Content accuracy validation date: 12.09.2025
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The UK's tax and customs systems will be modernized by 2030 using a "digital by default" model, according to HMRC's Transformation Roadmap. The strategy's three primary goals are to update key systems, reduce the tax gap, and enhance taxpayers' everyday experiences. HMRC wants 90% of all interactions to take place online by the end of the decade.

One notable component of this change is e-invoicing. HMRC and the Department for Business and Trade (DBT) are developing policies to encourage broader adoption of e-invoicing in the public and private sectors after a public consultation ended in May 2025. Simplifying invoice processing, lowering administrative expenses, and minimizing payment delays are the objectives, with SMEs particularly standing to gain.

The Making Tax Digital (MTD) initiative's expansion is also described in the roadmap. Taxpayers making over £50,000 will be subject to MTD for income tax starting in April 2026, with lower thresholds applied in the years that follow. However, HMRC will pursue internal digital improvements suited to various corporate needs rather than requiring MTD for Corporation Tax.

By 2026–2027, HMRC intends to replace Government Gateway with the new GOV.UK. One Login system, use real-time data, and improve its digital services with AI tools.

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