Landscaper & Gardener Self-Assessment Guide | Marsal Accountants
Self-Assessment Tax Guide for Landscapers & Gardeners by Marsal Accountants
Building beautiful outdoor spaces is your passion. Managing spreadsheets and tax calculations? Probably not.
As a self-employed landscaper or gardener in Paisley, Glasgow, or across Central Scotland, you have a unique set of expenses and income patterns.
Marsal Accountants understands the seasonal nature of your work and helps you file an accurate Self Assessment, ensuring you claim for everything from plants to petrol.
This guide is designed to help you cultivate a clear understanding of your tax responsibilities.
Understanding Your Self Assessment
Your tax return is the annual statement of your business’s health. It calculates your profit (income minus allowable expenses), on which you pay Income Tax and National Insurance.
The Value of Accurate Filing
- Avoid Penalties: Late filing triggers an immediate £100 fine.
- Maximize Your Claims: Proper records ensure you deduct every eligible cost, lowering your tax bill.
- Plan for the Future: Clear accounts help you price jobs better and manage seasonal cash flow.
- Peace of Mind: Knowing you’re fully compliant with HMRC lets you focus on your projects.
Cultivating Good Records: What to Keep
Income Seeds (What You Earn)
- Detailed invoices for landscaping projects, garden maintenance contracts, and one-off jobs
- Records of all payments received (bank transfer, cash, cheque)
- Income from selling plants, mulch, or other materials
Expenses You Can Weed Out (What You Claim)
- Tools & Machinery: Spades, mowers, strimmers, hedge cutters, leaf blowers, rented equipment
- Materials & Plants: Turf, soil, mulch, seeds, shrubs, trees, paving slabs, fence panels
- Vehicle & Travel: Fuel for vans/trailers, insurance, repairs, or claim 45p/mile for business travel
- Clothing: Safety boots, waterproof trousers, gloves, sun protection hats (if solely for work)
- Business Operations: Public liability insurance, website costs, phone bill (business %), bank charges, accountancy fees
- Subcontractor Costs: Payments to casual labour (record their details for HMRC)
- Home Office: Proportion of home costs for admin, or a flat-rate allowance
Navigating the Tax Year
The tax year runs 6 April to 5 April. Keep all receipts and records organised during this period.
After 5 April, you have until the following 31 January to file your online return and pay any tax due.
Common Growing Pains (Mistakes to Avoid)
- Ignoring Small Cash Jobs: All income, no matter how small, contributes to your turnover.
- Losing ‘Small’ Receipts: A bag of compost here, some bulbs there – it all adds up significantly over a year.
- Not Apportioning Costs: Is your van used 100% for business? Is your phone use