A soft landing for Making Tax Digital (MTD) for income tax, no changes to corporation tax rates, e-invoicing from 2029, more timely payments of VAT and PAYE, and a pensions salary sacrifice cap were the main features with some minor changes to capital allowances.
MTD for income tax
As lobbied for by the Institute, the Government announced a soft landing for MTD for income tax. Late submission penalties for quarterly updates will not apply during the 2026/27 tax year. However, from 6 April 2027 the new penalty regime will apply for late submission and late payments for all taxpayers. The penalties due for late payment of income tax self-assessment and VAT will increase from 1 April 2027. These changes will be legislated for via secondary legislation.
E-invoicing from 2029
From April 2029, all VAT invoices will need to be issued in a specified electronic format. The Government will work with stakeholders to develop an implementation roadmap to be published at Budget 2026. The decision to mandate from April 2029 follows the announcement on e-invoicing in Ireland’s most recent Budget when, on 8 October 2025 after Minister Donohoe’s Budget Speech announcement, Revenue’s paper “Implementation of eInvoicing in Ireland” was published.
VAT and PAYE
A consultation will be published in early 2026 to consider ways that VAT and PAYE liabilities can be paid promptly without the taxpayer falling behind on payments, including requiring more tax payments by direct debit.
Pensions salary sacrifice cap
From 6 April 2029, both employer and employee NICs will apply on pension contributions above £2,000 per annum made via salary sacrifice. These changes will be legislated for through primary and secondary legislation which will be introduced in due course. At present, what exactly will be classed as salary sacrifice requires clarification. However again, this is another change which will disincentivise saving for retirement and reduce the attractiveness of employer contributions.
Capital allowances
From April 2026, the rate of writing down allowances in the main pool will be reduced from 18 percent to 14 percent. However, from 1 January 2026 a new first-year allowance (FYA) of 40 percent will be available for main‑rate assets. Cars, second-hand assets and assets for leasing overseas will not be eligible.
The benefit this new FYA will have remains to be seen given that 100 relief is already available for all main pool expenditure via the annual investment allowance limit of £1 million and with unlimited 100 percent relief available for new main pool expenditure via full expensing.