Preparing For The Reforms (And Why The New Service Helps)
The Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency changes are not a single switch; they’re a multi‑year shift toward more accurate data, clearer accountability, and better‑quality filings. Expect stronger identity links, a registered email address on the record, stricter rules around where your registered office can be, and—over time—tighter standards for accounts and tagging. The new service is built with that future in mind. Practically, that means you should do a few things now. Create a Companies House account if you haven’t already and link your companies. Check that your registered office address meets the current rules and that you’ve set a suitable registered email address. Decide who in your team (and among advisers) should have filing access, and stop sharing the auth code casually. If you file accounts in‑house, talk to your accountant about the likely move toward better‑structured digital submissions so you’re not surprised later. The more you lean into the new service now, the smoother those reforms will feel as they land.
So, Which Should You Use Today?
Use the new service wherever it covers your filing—there’s no reason to stick with WebFiling out of habit. The interface is clearer, the checks are smarter, and the workflow is kinder when you’re juggling other priorities. If a particular form still points you to WebFiling, that’s fine; it’s still supported and still gets the job done. The real win is adopting the account‑based mindset: set up your Companies House account, link your companies, invite the right people, and get used to reviewing filings from a central dashboard. A simple playbook helps. Start each task from the new “file for your company” area. If it’s available, file there. If not, follow the prompt to the legacy route and keep going. Save drafts when you need to, and use email reminders to keep your calendar honest. Over the coming months, more forms will move across, and at some point you’ll notice you haven’t touched WebFiling in ages. When that happens, you’ll be glad you switched early.
Step-By-Step: From Estimate To Cash In Hand
Start broad, then refine. Step 1: Enter basics to get a ballpark, sanity-checking whether the total sits in a plausible range for your price point. Step 2: Add exact location and planned closing month to pull in taxes, recording, and escrow assumptions. Step 3: Select your real loan type and points strategy; toggling points on and off lets you weigh lower rates against higher upfront costs. Step 4: Layer in credits, such as seller concessions or lender credits, and see their effect on cash due at the table versus the long-run payment.
Start With the Classics
If it’s your first time at Waffle House, zero in on the greatest hits: a golden waffle, eggs your way, and some crispy bacon or sausage. The All-Star–style combo is famous for a reason—it’s the perfect snapshot of the menu. The waffle itself is surprisingly light, with a little crisp at the edges, and it carries butter and syrup like a champ. For eggs, you can go classic over-easy, fluffy scrambled, or get fancy with a cheese omelet if that’s your vibe. Pair it with toast (white or wheat), or ask for raisin toast if you’re feeling nostalgic.
Build Your Own House (Of Dynamite)
If the title makes your fingers itch, good. Start with a theme that isn’t a genre but a feeling: pressure cooker, midnight sprint, fireworks in slow motion. Dig for tracks that carry that spark from multiple angles—some obvious detonations, some matches struck in the dark. Sequence like a story: set the fuse with a confident opener, pace the burn, plant a sleeper hit at the midpoint, save something that tests the walls for the final act. Leave room for air; explosions are louder when they follow quiet.