HMRC penalty appeal accountant London
HMRC Appeals and Penalties support for tax disputes, reasonable excuse and penalty reductions.
Tax Accountant London helps individuals, landlords, company directors, employers, VAT-registered businesses and companies appeal HMRC penalties, challenge tax decisions, review reasonable excuse, prepare reasonable care arguments, respond to penalty notices and deal with HMRC reviews or tribunal routes.
A penalty appeal should explain the facts, dates, evidence, tax obligation, HMRC notice, reasonable excuse or reasonable care position and why the penalty should be cancelled, reduced, suspended or reviewed.
We review the penalty notice, appeal date, HMRC decision and whether a late appeal needs explanation.
Appeals should be supported by records, timeline, correspondence, medical evidence or system evidence where relevant.
We prepare reasonable excuse, reasonable care, behaviour, suspension, review or tribunal arguments.
HMRC appeals and penalties support
HMRC penalties should be checked against the law, facts, dates and evidence before payment or appeal.
HMRC penalties can arise from late tax returns, late payment, inaccuracies, failure to notify, VAT late submissions, PAYE issues, Corporation Tax filing failures, Self Assessment problems, careless errors, deliberate behaviour allegations or missed appeal deadlines.
A strong appeal is not just a request for sympathy. It should identify the legal basis, the facts, what stopped compliance, what steps were taken, what records exist, whether reasonable care was taken and whether HMRC has applied the penalty correctly.
Who needs HMRC penalty appeal advice
Penalty appeal support for taxpayers, landlords, companies, employers and VAT-registered businesses.
Penalty disputes can become expensive when the wrong appeal route is used, deadlines are missed or HMRC’s behaviour classification is accepted without challenge.
Individuals and Self Assessment taxpayers
Late filing penalties, late payment penalties, payments on account issues, reasonable excuse and tax return appeal support.
Landlords and property owners
Penalties linked to undeclared rental income, late returns, discovery assessments, disclosure behaviour and HMRC letters.
Companies and directors
Corporation Tax penalties, CT600 filing failures, director loan issues, company inaccuracies and behaviour disputes.
Employers and VAT businesses
PAYE, CIS, VAT late submission, VAT late payment, employer compliance penalties and records-based appeals.
HMRC penalty appeal services
Choose the appeal route by penalty type, deadline, evidence and HMRC decision.
A late filing appeal is different from an inaccuracy penalty dispute, VAT penalty challenge, failure to notify penalty, behaviour classification dispute, HMRC review request or tribunal appeal.
HMRC penalty notice review
The penalty notice should be checked before an appeal is filed.
HMRC penalty notices can include different appeal routes, deadlines and consequences. The first step is to identify what penalty has been issued, what tax it relates to, whether the penalty is valid and what evidence is available.
Late filing, late payment, inaccuracy, failure to notify, VAT, PAYE, CIS or Corporation Tax penalties need different arguments.
Most penalty appeals are time-sensitive. If the deadline has passed, a late appeal explanation may be needed.
The penalty amount, tax year, tax at stake, surcharge, points or percentage should be checked for accuracy.
Some appeals may be weakened if the return remains outstanding or the underlying tax position is unclear.
Medical records, HMRC letters, software evidence, adviser correspondence, bank evidence and timelines can be important.
The correct route may be direct appeal, HMRC review, suspension request, amendment, disclosure or tribunal appeal.
Reasonable excuse appeal
A reasonable excuse appeal needs facts, dates and evidence.
Reasonable excuse arguments may apply where something prevented the taxpayer from meeting a tax obligation despite taking reasonable care. The explanation should show what happened, when it happened, how it affected compliance and what was done once the issue ended.
Medical evidence, hospital records, bereavement details or serious personal circumstances may support an appeal.
Government Gateway access, HMRC delays, filing service issues or incorrect HMRC information may be relevant.
Reliance on an adviser is not always enough, but adviser correspondence and steps taken may still matter.
HMRC usually expects the taxpayer to put matters right promptly once the reason for delay no longer applies.
Common HMRC penalties we review
Different penalties need different technical and evidence-based arguments.
The right appeal depends on the penalty type. A late filing penalty may depend on reasonable excuse. An inaccuracy penalty may depend on reasonable care and behaviour. A VAT penalty may depend on the penalty point or late payment rules.
Appeals for missed tax return deadlines, daily penalties, six-month penalties and twelve-month penalties.
Appeals and mitigation where tax was paid late due to reasonable excuse, dispute, payment allocation or hardship issues.
Company Tax Return late filing penalties, repeated failure penalties and reasonable excuse arguments.
VAT late submission points, VAT late payment penalties, repayment checks and VAT compliance penalty disputes.
RTI filing penalties, CIS penalties, P11D issues, PAYE payment penalties and employer compliance penalties.
Penalties where HMRC says the taxpayer failed to tell HMRC about a tax liability at the right time.
Inaccuracy penalties and reasonable care
For incorrect returns, the key issue is often behaviour, not just the tax amount.
HMRC may charge inaccuracy penalties where a return or document is wrong and tax has been understated. The penalty position can depend on reasonable care, careless behaviour, deliberate behaviour, concealment, disclosure timing and the quality of cooperation.
If the taxpayer took reasonable care but the return was still wrong, a penalty may not be due.
Careless behaviour means a failure to take reasonable care and can lead to a lower category of inaccuracy penalty.
Deliberate behaviour is more serious and should not be accepted without reviewing the evidence and facts.
Concealment can significantly increase penalties where HMRC says steps were taken to hide the inaccuracy.
How we build an HMRC penalty appeal
The appeal should be structured around the law, evidence and HMRC’s decision.
Penalty appeals often fail because they are too brief, emotional or unsupported. A strong appeal should explain the legal ground, factual timeline, evidence and why HMRC’s penalty should be cancelled or reduced.
We set out what happened, when it happened, who was involved and how it affected filing, payment or reporting.
We gather HMRC letters, medical evidence, adviser correspondence, filing attempts, software records and tax documents.
We identify reasonable excuse, reasonable care, penalty validity, special circumstances, suspension or review grounds.
We ask HMRC to cancel, reduce, suspend or review the penalty where the evidence and law support that outcome.
HMRC review and tribunal appeal route
If HMRC refuses the appeal, the case may need review or tribunal consideration.
Where HMRC rejects an appeal, the taxpayer may be offered an HMRC review or may be able to appeal to the tax tribunal. The decision should be made after reviewing the strength of evidence, tax at stake, costs, deadlines and risk.
An independent HMRC officer can review the decision, evidence, appeal grounds and penalty position.
Where appropriate, the dispute may be taken to the First-tier Tribunal for an independent decision.
If the appeal deadline has been missed, the reason for lateness and merits of the case need to be addressed.
Some disputes may be resolved by agreement, revised penalty calculation or alternative HMRC handling.
Related HMRC support
Penalty disputes often sit alongside enquiries, disclosures or investigations.
If the penalty is part of a wider HMRC check, disclosure or investigation, the appeal should be coordinated with the underlying tax position rather than handled in isolation.
Documents needed for HMRC penalty appeals
The appeal should be supported by evidence, not just explanation.
Penalty notice, date of issue, appeal deadline, HMRC calculations, statements, assessments and previous letters.
Filed returns, submission receipts, payment records, bank evidence, Government Gateway records and HMRC account history.
Medical evidence, bereavement documents, adviser emails, software screenshots, HMRC delay evidence and filing attempts.
What happened, why the deadline was missed or return was wrong, when the issue ended and what action was taken.
Appeals and penalties process
A structured route from HMRC penalty notice to appeal, review or closure.
We identify the penalty type, tax year, deadline, appeal route, tax involved and HMRC decision.
We build a timeline and review documents, records, reasonable excuse and reasonable care evidence.
We draft the appeal, supporting explanation, evidence schedule and penalty cancellation or reduction request.
We assist with HMRC questions, review decisions, revised penalties, tribunal route and closure.
Appeals and penalties fees
Fees depend on the penalty type, evidence, deadline and HMRC route.
We quote before work starts. A simple late filing appeal is different from an inaccuracy penalty, failure to notify penalty, deliberate behaviour dispute, HMRC review or tribunal matter.
For reviewing the penalty notice, appeal deadline, penalty type and likely next steps.
For preparing a structured HMRC appeal with evidence, explanation and appeal grounds.
For inaccuracy penalties, behaviour disputes, failure to notify, HMRC review or tribunal-related work.
Appeals and Penalties FAQs
Common questions about HMRC penalty appeals, reasonable excuse, reasonable care and tribunal routes.
Can I appeal an HMRC penalty?
Yes, many HMRC penalties can be appealed if there is a valid reason, such as reasonable excuse, reasonable care, incorrect HMRC calculation, invalid penalty, special circumstances or a dispute about behaviour.
How long do I have to appeal an HMRC penalty?
You usually have 30 days from the date of the penalty notice to appeal or contact HMRC. If the deadline has passed, you may need to explain why the appeal is late.
What is a reasonable excuse?
A reasonable excuse is something that prevented you from meeting a tax obligation despite taking reasonable care. The facts, evidence, timing and action taken after the issue ended are important.
What is reasonable care?
Reasonable care is relevant where a return or document was inaccurate. If you took reasonable care to get the tax right, HMRC may not be able to charge an inaccuracy penalty.
Can HMRC cancel a late filing penalty?
HMRC may cancel a late filing penalty where a valid reasonable excuse applies or where the penalty has not been correctly charged. The appeal should be supported by evidence.
Can HMRC reduce an inaccuracy penalty?
Yes, penalties can sometimes be reduced depending on behaviour, disclosure quality, cooperation, special circumstances and whether HMRC’s behaviour classification is correct.
What if HMRC says the error was deliberate?
You should not accept a deliberate behaviour classification without reviewing the evidence. Deliberate behaviour carries higher penalties and can affect HMRC’s approach to the wider case.
What happens if HMRC rejects my appeal?
You may be able to request an HMRC review or appeal to the First-tier Tribunal, depending on the decision and deadlines. The strength of evidence and cost should be reviewed first.
Should I pay the penalty while appealing?
In some cases, paying may reduce interest risk if the appeal fails. The decision depends on the penalty type, cashflow, appeal merits and HMRC position.
Can you deal with HMRC on my behalf?
Once authorised and engaged, we can assist with penalty review, appeal drafting, evidence preparation, HMRC correspondence, review requests and tribunal route assessment within the agreed scope.