AI TaxPilot
🏛️ Flight plan🇬🇧 UK

Build & file your company accounts

Turn a year of bank transactions into FRS 105 micro-entity accounts and file the iXBRL to Companies House — without a spreadsheet in sight.

About 50 seconds5 stepsFor Directors of small & micro companiesOutcome: iXBRL accounts filed at Companies House
Step 1 of 5

Pick your company

Your company details are kept in sync from Companies House — registered office, SIC codes, officers and the accounting reference date are already there.

Step by step

The same journey, written out — so you can read it at your own pace.

  1. Pick your company

    Your company details are kept in sync from Companies House — registered office, SIC codes, officers and the accounting reference date are already there.

  2. Import the financial year

    Connect the company bank account and we categorise the year automatically — sales, costs, salaries and dividends — ready to map.

  3. Map to FRS 105

    The accounts wizard maps each total to the right micro-entity line. Add manual entries where you need them, pulled from your bank, profile or HMRC — not just this screen.

  4. Review the accounts

    See the full profit & loss and balance sheet, with the micro-entity disclosures and director’s statement generated for you.

  5. File to Companies House

    We tag the accounts as iXBRL and file them straight to Companies House — and keep them ready to feed your CT600.

Common questions

Which companies can use FRS 105?

Micro-entities — broadly under £1m turnover, £500k balance-sheet total and 10 employees. AI TaxPilot checks your size and picks FRS 105 or FRS 102 §1A automatically.

Does this also do my confirmation statement?

Yes — the confirmation statement (CS01) and your CT600 are driven from the same synced company record, so you don’t re-key anything.

Companies House + HMRC, one workflow

Build iXBRL accounts from your bank feed, file to Companies House and carry the numbers straight into your CT600.

Start free

This guide is general information, not personal tax advice, and reflects the rules we believe to apply as at June 2026 — rates and thresholds change. Always check your own figures against HMRC and consider a qualified adviser before acting. You remain responsible for the accuracy of anything you file.

Go deeper

The full guides and articles behind this journey.

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