In kitchen tables across the country, a quiet revolution is rising. Home bakers, many of them mothers, retirees, and side-hustlers, are turning flour and sugar into serious cash. Some are pulling in £1,000 a week from bespoke birthday cakes, vegan cupcakes, and gluten-free loaves. But as the dough piles up, so do the questions. Is this a golden era for micro-enterprise or the beginning of a crackdown?
Take Amy, a 34-year-old former office manager from Doncaster. Last year, she started baking from her terraced house after being made redundant. Within six months, her Instagram page had 15,000 followers and her order book was full. ‘I’m making more than I did in my old job,’ she tells me, ‘but I’m terrified of the taxman.’ Amy is not alone. A quick search on Etsy reveals hundreds of UK home bakers offering everything from rainbow layer cakes to keto brownies. Many operate in a grey area, making less than the £1,000 trading allowance. But for those exceeding it, the clock is ticking.
The rise of ‘cottage food’ businesses has been fuelled by social media, cheap ingredients, and a public hunger for artisanal, personalised goods. Yet HMRC is now taking notice. Last month, the tax authority confirmed it is reviewing the sector, with plans to share data from platforms like Etsy and Facebook Marketplace. The message is clear: earnings from cake sales are taxable. But for many bakers, the issue is not evasion, it is confusion. ‘I didn’t know I had to register,’ admits Sally, a 52-year-old from Leeds who sells celebration cakes. ‘I thought because it’s a hobby, it’s fine.’
The problem is that the line between hobby and business is blurry. HMRC's guidance states that if you sell cakes ‘regularly and with a view to profit’, you must register as self-employed. But many bakers argue they are simply covering costs. ‘I charge £30 for a cake,’ says Sally. ‘After ingredients, packaging, and electricity, I make maybe £10. That’s not profit.’ Yet the tax system does not always recognise that nuance. For now, the threshold for paying income tax is £12,570, but national insurance kicks in at £6,725. And if you earn over £85,000, you must register for VAT, a reality that could crush small bakers.
But there are deeper fears. The rise of home baking is a symptom of a broken labour market. With wages stagnating and gig work precarious, many are turning to what they love. Yet the very flexibility that makes such work appealing is also its Achilles’ heel. ‘I have no sick pay, no holiday pay, no pension,’ says Amy. ‘If I break my wrist, I’m done.’ The dream of being your own boss is seductive, but it comes with zero safety net. Bakers work late nights, deal with demanding customers, and face the constant risk of a bad review destroying their reputation.
Regional inequality plays its part too. In the North, where job opportunities are thinner, home baking is a lifeline. ‘In London, you can get a £50 cake from a fancy shop,’ says Laura, who runs a cottage bakery in Sunderland. ‘Here, people want a cheap, decent cake. I charge £20.’ But the margins are tight. And if HMRC forces formal registration, many will quit. ‘I can’t afford an accountant,’ Laura says. ‘I’ll just stop.’
The Government’s ‘Making Tax Digital’ initiative aims to simplify reporting, but for the low-income baker, the digital shift feels like an added burden. Meanwhile, the Trades Union Congress warns that the expansion of self-employment without protections is a race to the bottom. ‘These bakers are not entrepreneurs in the tech-bro sense,’ says an TUC economist. ‘They are workers trying to make ends meet. We need a social security system that supports them, not penalises them.’
The future of home baking hangs in the balance. Without clearer guidance, many will continue to operate in the shadows, risking fines and penalties. But with the right support, this could be a model for inclusive growth. For now, the cake sellers keep baking, hoping no one asks to see their books. As one baker told me: ‘I just want to make people happy and pay my bills. Is that too much to ask?’








