November 21st, 2011
HMRC is to change its Pay As You Earn (PAYE) system to detect owed deductions on a monthly basis, rather than yearly, in a bid to make the system easier for employers.
Using Real Time Information (RTI), tax and deductions will be transmitted to HMRC each time an employee is paid, meaning employers will no long be required to provide information using forms P35 and P14 after the year end or to send p45/46 when employees start or leave employment.
The phased introduction of RTI will begin in April 2012 with an initial pilot. HMRC hope to increase the number of employers joining RTI during 2012-13 following the scheme’s success.
However some advisors and employers are being a tad nieve about the introduction of this, believing all they read. Please do not fall into this trap, the number of professional bodies that are urging HMRC to delay its introduction is huge but HMRC are beligerantly pushing ahead, which spells a recipe for disaster. Still not convinced, well don’t forget there are now in year business record checks and potential for in year penalties, to encourage you. If you need advice on this and more importantly a review of what you are doing to make sure you can handle this, call us today on 0800 917 9176
Posted in EICG, Employment Tax Experts, HMRC - what are they up to?, PAYE/NIC/CIS Penalties, Real Time Information | Tags: business records check, compliance audits, employer compliance review, employer compliance reviews, end of year records, HMRC penalties, HMRC tax compliance, HMRC tax compliance visits, PAYE Underpayments, PAYE/NIC, PAYE/NIC investigations, PAYE/NIC PENALTIES, Real Time Information, RTI | Comments:
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October 4th, 2011
During a business records check (BRC) an HMRC officer will view the business records of the current accounting period and assess whether those records are ‘adequate’. In this context ‘adequate’ should mean the records are sufficient to compile accurate tax and VAT returns, but the BRC brief implies the HMRC officer will be looking for the following errors in the business records:
- Understated sales;
- Overstated expenses; and
- Private expenditure claimed as business costs.
If the HMRC officer concludes the business has failed to keep adequate records he can impose a penalty of up to £3,000.
HMRC tested their BRC programme between 4 April and 15 July 2011, during which up to 800 businesses were advised about their records, but no penalties were levied. However, since mid September HMRC has expanded the BRC programme and is increasing the number of HMRC officers involved from 30 to 120. HMRC plan to conduct approximately 12,000 BRC visits before 1 April 2012, and a further 20,000 BRC visits in 2012/13. On those numbers at least one of your clients is likely to be subject to a BRC in the next 18 months.
Business who were visited in the first stage of the BRC programme, and who were judged to have issues with their record keeping, are receiving follow-up letters from HMRC requesting a repeat visit; ‘to check that the appropriate improvements have been made.’ Remember the records under inspection are those raw documents that have not yet been sorted or vetted by someone who understands exactly which expenses can be claimed for tax purpose
In this second stage of the BRC programme HMRC is prepared to impose penalties for serious record keeping failures. However, certain professional bodies, including myself are not convinced of the legal basis for charging such penalties, before the tax return has been submitted.
Posted in Employment Tax Experts, HMRC - what are they up to?, HMRC penalties | Tags: BRC, business records check, compliance audits, employer compliance review, employer compliance reviews, employment tax, HMRC penalties, HMRC tax compliance, HMRC tax compliance visits, PAYE/NIC PENALTIES | Comments:
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May 11th, 2011
HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) is issuing an urgent reminder to employers – file your annual PAYE/NIC return online by the 19 May deadline, or you could face a penalty.
Employer Annual Returns must be sent to HMRC by the 19 May filing deadline. Failure to do so will almost certainly result in a late-filing penalty. In previous years, an extra-statutory concession gave employers extra time before HMRC charged a penalty, but this has now been withdrawn.
And from this year, employers will be liable to a penalty if they file their annual return on paper (with some very limited exceptions, such as certain individuals who employ their own carer). Last year, no penalty was charged for employers with five or fewer employees, but these transitional arrangements have now ended.Penalties
Posted in HMRC - what are they up to?, HMRC penalties, PAYE/NIC/CIS Penalties | Tags: end of year records, End of Year returns, Form P35, Forms P14, Forms P35, HMRC penalties, PAYE/NIC, PAYE/NIC PENALTIES | Comments:
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September 6th, 2010
A £158BN hole in the public finances means that HMRC are being used to try and raise extra cash for the Treasury, as quickly as possible and that will mean easy targets, so small and medium size firms, anyone in the construction industry are in the direct firing line for:
employer compliance reviews
PAYE/NIC investigations
Employment status reviews
tax investigations
you name it and they are heading your way and don’t think it won’t happen to you – it will, so why not take advantage of the special deal that EICG is running this month on PAYE/NIC healthchecks and Construction Industry reviews, call us today on 0800 917 9176 to see how we can help you avoid being a victim
Posted in CIS, HMRC - what are they up to?, HMRC penalties, PAYE/NIC/CIS Penalties, Tax Investigations | Tags: CIS late filing penalties, CIS penalties, compliance audits, Construction Industry, Construction Industry reviews, employer compliance review, employer compliance reviews, employment status reviews, HMRC inspections, HMRC tax compliance, HMRC tax investigations, PAYE investigations, PAYE/NIC healthchecks, PAYE/NIC investigations, PAYE/NIC PENALTIES, tax enquiries, tax investigation, tax investigations | Comments:
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July 7th, 2010
HMRC announced in June that Extra Statuory Concession B46 (ESC B46) allowing a seven-day grace period for late employers’ and contractors’ returns will cease from 31 March 2011.
ESC B46 established the principle that penalties would not be charged when employers and contractors submitting tax returns and CIS forms had taken “all reasonable steps” to file their returns on time, but were not able to do so due to unforeseen circumstances such as postal delays.
With the advent of online filing, which is required for P35s and P14s and will become mandatory for Corporation Tax returns from 1 April, HMRC considers the concession to be “redundant” because the delays it was intended to address will no longer happen. Returns must therefore reach the department by their due date or incur a late filing penalty of £100.
Confirming the new penalty regime HMRC explained: “Any customers filing a return late will, as now, be able to request us to remove any penalty, if they believe they had a reasonable excuse for the delay in filing. We will consider every case on its own merits. Customers can also appeal against the penalty to a Tribunal.”
Posted in CIS, HMRC - what are they up to?, HMRC penalties, PAYE/NIC/CIS Penalties, Tax Investigations | Tags: CIS late filing penalties, CIS penalties, employer compliance review, employer compliance reviews, HMRC penalties, late filing penalties, PAYE/NIC PENALTIES, PAYE/NIC/CIS late filing | Comments:
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June 28th, 2010
The Budget announced a welcome break for new businesses outside the South East, that of a National Insurance Holiday giving new companies the chance to take on employees, the first 10 of which will not have employers NIC due for the first 12 months, giving a potential saving of £50,000 BUT and it is a big but for new businesses. The Budget statements have been released and alluded to the fact that new businesses from 22 June 2010 would potentially qualify but the scheme itself was unlikely to be ready until September – so immediate confusion caused – qualifying companies from 22 June but scheme not ready until September so many new businesses are thinking that the NIC holiday will apply to them if they set up business after 22 June – yes and no – not all companies will qualify (exclusions on fishing, agriculture and mining already mentioned) but the NIC holiday CAN’T start until the scheme officially starts, so even if you set up a company (and are trading) in the period 22 June to official scheme start up you CAN’T apply the NIC holiday, you need to operate the “normal” NIC rules and this may catch out a lot of new businesses. The NIC holiday will start when the scheme officially starts whether it be September of another future date. It is important that companies do not fall foul of this rule as penalties are drachonian. If you are in any doubt contact the employment tax expert
Posted in HMRC - what are they up to?, HMRC penalties | Tags: employer compliance review, employer compliance reviews, Employers NIC, employment tax, HMRC penalties, National Insurance Holiday, National Insurance Holiday Scheme, PAYE/NIC PENALTIES | Comments:
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