Retaining business records
Sole traders
If you are self-employed, and obliged to submit a self-assessment tax return, you must keep your tax records for at least five years after the 31 January submission deadline of the relevant tax year. For example, if you submit your 2018-19 tax return online on or before 31 January 2020, you must keep your records until at least the end of January 2025. Records for this purpose include those relating to personal income etc.
If you send your tax return more than four years after the deadline, you will need to keep your records for fifteen months after you submit your tax return.
If you keep your tax records on a computer, make sure you have sufficient backups of your data to meet these requirements. If you change software during the record retention period, you may need to print relevant reports if you are unable to maintain access to data backups.
Limited companies
If you run your business as a limited company you must keep records for six years from the end of the last company financial year they relate to, or longer if:
- they show a transaction that covers more than one of the company’s accounting periods,
- the company has bought something that it expects to last more than six years, like equipment or machinery,
- you sent your Company Tax return late, or
- HMRC has started a compliance check into your Company Tax return.
If you are not in business, the minimum period is 22 months after the 31 January filing deadline and at least 15 months after filing if later.
GDPR
The new data protection regulations require that you don’t keep the personal data of your customers, staff or other contacts beyond the date required by law that they be retained.
Keeping this data online or in dusty boxes indefinitely is no longer an option, you risk heavy fines if you do.
Most online document management systems now have a filter process that will help you manage this search and destroy requirement. As for the storage boxes, you will have to resort to a more hands on approach.