TaxSource Total

Here you can access summary of the key current tax developments in Ireland, the UK and internationally as reported by Chartered Accountants Ireland

The report of key tax developments are displayed per year, per month, by Ireland, the UK or International and by report title

What happens if you don’t report payroll information on time?

New guidance has issued on how to avoid penalties and the late payment interest.

HMRC charges penalties when:

  • a full payment submission (FPS) is late, or
  • the expected number of FPSs for a tax month were not received by HMRC, or
  • an employer payment summary (EPS) is not submitted when no employees were paid in a tax month (a nil payment EPS).

To prevent late payment interest accruing, employers should pay penalties within 30 days of receipt of the relevant notice.

HMRC will not charge a penalty when:

  • a new employer sends its first FPS within 30 days of paying an employee, or
  • it is a first failure in the tax year to send a report on time (this does not apply to annual PAYE schemes).

The guidance does refer to the temporary three-day late filing penalty relaxation which applied from 6 March 2015 up to 5 April 2017. This easement has now been confirmed as existing for 2017/2018.

The updated guidance also covers:

  • the quantum of the penalty (which depends on employee numbers),
  • penalties for submissions more than three months late,
  • ‘specified charges’ (which are HMRC’s estimate of what the employer owes) – the employer can view these on their PAYE account online,
  • grounds for appeal (the penalty notice should include details on how to appeal), and
  • penalties for inaccurate reports.