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Hmrc Guide To Penalties

HMRC Penalties Guide Made Simple for Tax Agents and Employers

Written by Crystal HR & Payroll
17 Sep 2014

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Mistakes in tax returns happen. Sometimes they’re genuine errors, sometimes it’s carelessness and sometimes HMRC believes the behaviour goes further. Whatever the cause, HMRC can apply penalties if inaccurate information leads to underpaid tax.

This HMRC Penalties Guide explains how penalties work, what counts as an inaccuracy, the penalty ranges, how HMRC decides the penalty level, how disclosures reduce penalties, and what to do if HMRC contacts you. It also includes examples, FAQs and links to official HMRC resources so you can get accurate, up-to-date information.

HMRC Penalties Guide

What Counts as an Inaccuracy?

HMRC treats an inaccuracy as anything that:

  • reduces tax that should have been paid
  • increases tax relief or repayment
  • or results in a loss of tax

Common examples include:

  • incorrect tax codes
  • unreported benefits in kind
  • payroll figures entered incorrectly
  • ignoring an HMRC coding notice
  • mistakes in CIS deductions
  • missing income or deductions
  • incorrect VAT or PAYE entries

HMRC’s definition of inaccuracies:
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/penalties-for-inaccuracies-in-return-and-documents


How HMRC Decides the Penalty Level

HMRC looks at behaviour, not the size of the mistake. There are three categories:


1. Careless

A lack of reasonable care.

Example: Not checking figures before submitting a return; forgetting to action a coding notice.

Penalty range: 0%–30%


2. Deliberate

You knew the information was wrong but submitted it anyway.

Example: Intentionally under-reporting income.

Penalty range: 20%–70%


3. Deliberate and Concealed

You knew it was wrong and took steps to hide it.

Example: falsified payslips or payroll records.

Penalty range: 30%–100%


How HMRC Reduces Penalties (Telling, Helping and Giving)

HMRC reduces penalties based on how much you cooperate when an error is found. This is called “telling, helping and giving”.


Telling HMRC

Being open about:

  • what the inaccuracy is
  • how it happened
  • who was involved
  • when you discovered it

This increases reductions for disclosure.


Helping HMRC

This includes:

  • answering questions quickly
  • providing records promptly
  • explaining your processes
  • helping HMRC understand the full position

The more help provided, the bigger the reduction.


Giving HMRC access

Allowing HMRC to check:

  • working papers
  • payroll records
  • software reports
  • internal notes

Full access = higher penalty reductions.

These three behaviours determine whether a penalty is reduced to the bottom or top of the range.


How Penalties Are Calculated (8-Step HMRC Process)

HMRC uses an eight-step calculation:

  1. Identify the inaccuracy
  2. Work out the potential lost revenue
  3. Decide behaviour (careless/deliberate/concealed)
  4. Set the penalty range
  5. Consider disclosure (prompted/unprompted)
  6. Apply reductions for telling, helping and giving
  7. Review special circumstances
  8. Finalise penalty decision

This ensures consistency across all tax types, not just payroll

Quick question, are you finding our HMRC Penalties Guide useful? If you are, please let us know


Special Circumstances (Rare, but Possible)

HMRC may reduce a penalty further if there are exceptional circumstances. Examples include:

  • severe illness during the period of error
  • a natural disaster affecting records

These cases are rare and HMRC applies them sparingly.


Can Penalties Be Suspended? (Careless Errors Only)

HMRC can suspend penalties for careless errors for up to 2 years, if future compliance can prevent the same mistake recurring.

Suspension conditions may include:

  • keeping better records
  • improving your payroll process
  • using professional software
  • staff training
  • regular internal checks

If all conditions are met, the penalty is cancelled.


Company Director Liability

HMRC may hold company officers personally liable for penalties where:

  • the company is insolvent
  • the error was deliberate
  • the officer knew about the behaviour
  • the officer gained personally

This applies only in more serious cases.


Criminal Investigation and Serious Defaulters

HMRC may escalate behaviour to criminal investigation where:

  • fraud is suspected
  • records have been falsified
  • concealment was deliberate and sophisticated
  • the amounts involved are significant

HMRC may also publish the names of deliberate defaulters if certain thresholds are met.


Your Rights if HMRC Is Considering Penalties

You have rights under the Human Rights Act, including:

  • the right to be told why HMRC thinks a penalty applies
  • the right to representation
  • the right to remain silent
  • the right to appeal

You can request:

  • a statutory review
  • alternative dispute resolution
  • or appeal to the tax tribunal

What Taxes the Penalty Rules Apply To

The rules apply across multiple taxes, including:

  • PAYE
  • NICs
  • VAT
  • CIS
  • Corporation Tax
  • Income Tax Self-Assessment
  • Stamp Duty taxes

Full list in the HMRC factsheet.


Penalty Ranges at a Glance

Behaviour TypePenalty RangeNotes
Careless0%–30%Can reduce to 0% with full disclosure
Deliberate20%–70%Higher if HMRC discovers the error
Deliberate & Concealed30%–100%Most serious category

Examples of How HMRC Penalties Work

These simple examples mirror real HMRC behaviour.


Example 1 – Ignored Coding Notice (Careless)

A tax code change was issued by HMRC. Payroll didn’t update it.
→ Underpaid tax → careless error → penalty reduced to 0% after early disclosure.


Example 2 – Repeated Benefit in Kind Errors (Careless → Deliberate)

Year 1: Forgot P11D entries → careless.
Year 2: Same mistake again → treated as deliberate.


Example 3 – False CIS Deduction Statement (Deliberate & Concealed)

Subcontractor knowingly falsifies CIS paperwork.
→ Penalty may reach 100%.


How to Avoid HMRC Penalties

  • Keep accurate payroll and tax records
  • Action HMRC notices immediately
  • Review RTI submissions
  • Use reliable payroll software
  • Train staff or outsource payroll
  • Perform regular internal audits
  • Make voluntary disclosures early

Voluntary disclosure service:
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/tell-hmrc-about-an-unpaid-tax-liability


Frequently Asked Questions

Do HMRC always charge a penalty for mistakes?

No. If you took reasonable care, HMRC may charge no penalty.

How far back can HMRC look?

Up to 6 years for careless behaviour, 20 years for deliberate conduct.

Can penalties really be reduced to zero?

Yes — with full, early disclosure.

Can a director be personally liable?

Yes, in cases involving deliberate behaviour.


Useful Resources

  • HMRC Compliance Factsheet

Need Help Avoiding HMRC Penalties?

We support employers and tax agents by providing:

  • payroll audits
  • compliance reviews
  • error correction
  • HMRC enquiry support
  • full outsourced payroll

Book a free call with our team to discuss your situation.

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