Site icon Haznos

Tax Rebates When You Least Expect Them

<p>These days there is a massive emphasis on those paying taxes ensuring that all of the details they provide to HMRC are correct&period;  However&comma; what about HM Revenue &amp&semi; Customs&quest;  Surely they cannot always be right&quest;<br &sol;>&NewLine;With the administration and collection of tax becoming more and more complex over recent years&comma; HMRC is increasingly making mistakes&period; It simply cannot keep up with the number of changes which have been made and with staff relocating and offices amalgamating it is difficult to know who is dealing with what&period;  Whilst most people will highlight errors where they have been assessed to pay more tax&comma; how forthcoming should taxpayers be when HMRC has undercharged them&quest;<br &sol;>&NewLine;The answer that most people would want to hear is that they can keep the money&period; Why not&quest; It&&num;8217&semi;s HMRC&&num;8217&semi;s error after all&comma; so they should be made to pay&period; They&&num;8217&semi;d be quick enough to claw it back if they knew&comma; right&quest;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Unfortunately&comma; things are not so simple&period; The instances of undetected errors are on the increase with HMRC&comma; despite moves to plug holes&period; This was shown recently where HMRC requested tax refunds already paid back to over a million tax payers due to PAYE coding errors&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;This caused outrage at the time&comma; but HMRC were within their rights to come back for this money&comma; even though it was their error which caused the problem&period; This clearly shows that HMRC can and will try to recoup any tax refunded in error&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Put simply&comma; if the taxpayer is aware that HMRC has overpaid them in error&comma; keeping the money may be tantamount to theft within the Theft Act 1968&period; Of course this is an extreme example and in practice criminal action would be unlikely unless a serious breach or theft had been carried out&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;But how many taxpayers will know whether a repayment is correct or not without assistance&quest; The sad truth is that tax is not an easy subject to understand&period; With the number of Finance Acts introduced since the credit crunch in 2008 increasing&comma; even the most learned adviser can have problems knowing what is current and what is old law&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;If in any doubt about why a repayment has been issued unexpectedly&comma; the taxpayer should contact HMRC in the first instance to see why they have received it&period;  There have been instances where this has assisted the taxpayer in the latter stages of correspondence&period;  If the taxpayer takes steps to get to the bottom of what is essentially an HMRC error&comma; then it would be difficult to argue that they intended to defraud the Treasury&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Article written by Christine Roache&comma; who is expecting a tax rebate&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

Exit mobile version