Private practice tax for doctors, consultants, GPs, medico-legal income and medical company tax

Private Practice Tax for Doctors

We help doctors, consultants, GPs and medical specialists deal with tax on private practice income, clinic income, medico-legal reports, advisory fees, waiting list initiatives, private hospital work, limited company income, expenses, VAT risk, NHS pension tax and Self Assessment reporting.

Tax returns and accounts for private consultants, GPs and doctors with medical income outside NHS payroll Review of private fees, expenses, limited company options, VAT risk, pension tax and payments on account Clear support where income is received personally, through a company, through a partnership or from private hospitals
Why private practice tax needs care

Private medical income can affect more than your annual tax bill.

Private practice income may create Self Assessment filing duties, payments on account, pension tax exposure, VAT questions, company structure decisions, expense claims, HMRC enquiry risk and record-keeping obligations. The right tax treatment depends on how the income is earned, who pays it and whether it is received personally, through a company or through another structure.

Income route

Private income must be matched to the correct tax route.

Clinic fees, private hospital fees, medico-legal income, advisory work and consultancy income may be reported differently depending on whether you trade personally, through a company or through a partnership.

Expenses

Professional costs should be claimed carefully.

Indemnity, secretary costs, room hire, billing fees, travel, software, equipment, training, subscriptions and professional fees need evidence and the correct tax treatment.

Pension tax

Private income may affect NHS pension annual allowance exposure.

Additional income can affect adjusted income, threshold income and tapered annual allowance calculations for doctors with NHS Pension Scheme membership.

The private practice tax route

We review the income source, structure, expenses, pension position and filing route before preparing the tax position.

Private practice tax is not just data entry. We check the commercial arrangement and supporting records first, so the tax return, accounts and planning advice follow the facts.

01

Income source

Clinic income, private hospital fees, medico-legal reports, advisory work, consultancy fees and partnership income.

02

Structure

Personal trading, partnership, limited company, joint ownership, employment, agency or mixed arrangements.

03

Expenses

Indemnity, room hire, admin support, billing fees, travel, subscriptions, equipment and software.

04

Tax planning

Pension tax, payments on account, VAT risk, company extraction, spouse involvement and cashflow.

05

Filing

Self Assessment, company accounts, Corporation Tax, VAT, payroll, dividend records and HMRC notes.

Common private practice issues

Tax points doctors should check before filing private practice income.

Private practice tax can be straightforward, but small classification errors can create future HMRC questions, pension tax issues or unnecessary tax payments.

Income

Private hospital and clinic fees

Income needs to be matched to invoices, remittance statements, bank receipts and the correct tax year.

Review income →
MLR

Medico-legal report income

Report writing, expert witness work and legal fees may create different timing, expense and VAT considerations.

Review fees →
LTD

Using a limited company

Company use may help in some cases, but salary, dividends, Corporation Tax, IR35, VAT and pension position need review.

Company accounts →
VAT

Medical services and VAT risk

Some medical services may be exempt, but consultancy, expert reports or non-clinical services can require closer VAT review.

Review VAT →
What we can help with

Private practice tax support for doctors, consultants and GPs.

We can help with tax returns, accounts, company planning, expenses, VAT, NHS pension tax and HMRC compliance issues.

01

Private practice Self Assessment

Tax returns for doctors with private clinic income, private hospital income, advisory work, medico-legal fees or consultancy income.

Self Assessment →
02

Private practice accounts

Accounts preparation, profit calculation, expense review, tax calculation, payments on account and HMRC filing support.

Doctor accounts →
03

Limited company planning

Advice on whether to operate through a company and support with accounts, Corporation Tax, salary, dividends and director loan accounts.

Company accounts →
04

Expense and professional fee review

Review of indemnity, GMC, BMA, Royal College fees, room hire, secretary costs, billing fees, travel, software and equipment.

Fees relief →
05

NHS pension and private income review

Review of whether private income affects annual allowance, tapered annual allowance, Scheme Pays and Self Assessment pension tax entries.

Pension tax →
06

HMRC disclosure and compliance support

Support where private income was missed, filed late, incorrectly reported or HMRC has opened a compliance check.

Tax disclosure →
Company or personal trading

A limited company can be useful, but it is not automatically the best answer.

Some doctors use a limited company for private practice income, medico-legal work or consultancy fees. This can create planning opportunities, but it also brings company accounts, Corporation Tax, dividend paperwork, payroll, director loan account, VAT review and extraction planning.

We compare the personal trading route and company route, taking account of tax, admin cost, pension impact, future cash extraction, commercial risk and HMRC compliance.

Payments on account

A first private practice tax return can create a larger-than-expected payment.

Doctors with new private income may face balancing tax and payments on account. Cashflow should be reviewed before the filing deadline.

VAT

Not every medical-related service is treated the same way for VAT.

Clinical treatment, medico-legal reports, consultancy, expert witness work and management services may need different VAT analysis.

Pension

Private income may increase annual allowance exposure.

Extra income can affect adjusted income and tapered annual allowance calculations, especially for consultants and higher earning GPs.

HMRC enquiry

Records should support the figures filed.

Bank receipts, invoices, hospital statements, expense evidence and explanation notes help protect the position if HMRC asks questions.

Records needed

What we usually need for private practice tax work.

The exact documents depend on whether the income is personal, company, partnership, PAYE, medico-legal or private hospital income.

Income

Invoices, private hospital statements, clinic reports, medico-legal fee notes, remittance advices and bank receipts.

Expenses

Indemnity, secretary costs, room hire, billing fees, travel, software, professional subscriptions, equipment and training records.

Structure

Details of whether income is received personally, through a company, through a partnership or via payroll.

NHS income

P60, payslips, pension statements, NHS role and other employment income where pension tax or tapering may be relevant.

Tax history

Previous tax returns, HMRC statements, payments on account and any HMRC letters about private income or expenses.

How we work

A clear process for private practice accounts, tax returns and planning.

We identify how the income is earned, review records, prepare the tax position and advise on planning points before filing.

Income and structure review

We check whether the private income is personal, company, partnership, PAYE, medico-legal, clinical or consultancy income.

Records and expenses

We request income statements, bank receipts, invoices, professional costs and expense evidence for the relevant tax year.

Tax calculation and planning

We calculate profit, tax, payments on account and review VAT, company, pension and cashflow issues.

Filing and next-year plan

We file the tax return or company accounts and confirm future records, payments, deadlines and planning points.

Private practice tax FAQs

Common questions from doctors about private practice tax.

These answers are general guidance only. The correct treatment depends on contracts, income route, expenses, VAT position, pension position and records.

Do doctors need a tax return for private practice income?

Usually, yes, if private practice income is not fully taxed through PAYE. The return may need self-employment, partnership, employment or company-related entries depending on how the income is received.

Can private practice income be put through a limited company?

Sometimes, but it must be reviewed properly. Company use depends on contracts, IR35 risk, VAT, pension impact, profit extraction, administrative cost and commercial purpose.

What expenses can private practice doctors claim?

Common areas include indemnity, room hire, secretary support, billing fees, travel, software, professional subscriptions, equipment and training. The expense must be supported and relevant to the income route.

Can private income affect NHS pension tax?

Yes. Additional income can affect adjusted income and tapered annual allowance calculations, so pension tax should be checked for higher earning doctors.

Is private medical work VAT exempt?

Some healthcare services can be exempt, but not all medical-related work is treated the same way. Medico-legal, consultancy, expert witness and non-clinical work may need separate VAT review.

Need help with private practice income, expenses, company planning or tax return filing?

Send a short summary of your private practice income, how you are paid, whether you use a company, and the tax year involved. We will confirm the records needed and the next step.