Ok, so what happens if you do claim it and how do you get caught?
The latter will start with either an aspect enquiry or a compliance review into your employer. There is quite a low chance of an aspect enquiry, about 1% are conducted randomly I believe.
A good trigger for an aspect enquiry is anything not adding up on a tax return.
Now given the general focus on umbrellas etc I think it is quite likely that HMRC will be conducting compliance reviews on them fairly soon. That gives them a nice list of all the individuals to investigate. Don't forget that your brolly also submits your expenses to the IR.
Now what happens if your are unable to satisfy them immediately?
Firstly you spend a lot of time at the tax office or your home having meetings with an inspector. They pour through everything you have done for years and generally make a huge nuisance of themselves. [Assuming you are prepared to cooperate at all that is]. This is a process that takes usually months (years in my and a lot of other cases).
After a lot of arguing you agree a settlement figure. This will be at a minimum the tax unpad plus statutory interest and penalties. Penalties start from 100% and are reduced according to the level of cooperation. You also have to sign a declaration which basically says "I have now disclosed absolutely everything about anything you could possibly want to know for this period". [If they then turn anything further up - and they are perfectly entitled to carry on looking you will be in very big trouble indeed. This is a common route to going to jail. At this point they generally know if you are still hiding anything].l
This is of course provided the IR believe it was simply an error on your part. If they beleive it was deliberate (but only generally if the sums are largeish) they just go for criminal conviction (and send you a random assessment you need to try and defend - this can be difficult from parkhurst).
But will they bother for the sums your are stealing (this is what you are proposing to do)?
Probably. It is in HMRC interest to investigate small oversights agressively. This is because when you are down the pub you'll say to your mates "that rotten sod from the IR, 3 years of twatting about a few hundred quid in penalties and all for mistakenly claiming a fiver". This is a hyge deterrent to reasonably honest folk.
Of course when you get the enquiry they may be easy to please.
The latter will start with either an aspect enquiry or a compliance review into your employer. There is quite a low chance of an aspect enquiry, about 1% are conducted randomly I believe.
A good trigger for an aspect enquiry is anything not adding up on a tax return.
Now given the general focus on umbrellas etc I think it is quite likely that HMRC will be conducting compliance reviews on them fairly soon. That gives them a nice list of all the individuals to investigate. Don't forget that your brolly also submits your expenses to the IR.
Now what happens if your are unable to satisfy them immediately?
Firstly you spend a lot of time at the tax office or your home having meetings with an inspector. They pour through everything you have done for years and generally make a huge nuisance of themselves. [Assuming you are prepared to cooperate at all that is]. This is a process that takes usually months (years in my and a lot of other cases).
After a lot of arguing you agree a settlement figure. This will be at a minimum the tax unpad plus statutory interest and penalties. Penalties start from 100% and are reduced according to the level of cooperation. You also have to sign a declaration which basically says "I have now disclosed absolutely everything about anything you could possibly want to know for this period". [If they then turn anything further up - and they are perfectly entitled to carry on looking you will be in very big trouble indeed. This is a common route to going to jail. At this point they generally know if you are still hiding anything].l
This is of course provided the IR believe it was simply an error on your part. If they beleive it was deliberate (but only generally if the sums are largeish) they just go for criminal conviction (and send you a random assessment you need to try and defend - this can be difficult from parkhurst).
But will they bother for the sums your are stealing (this is what you are proposing to do)?
Probably. It is in HMRC interest to investigate small oversights agressively. This is because when you are down the pub you'll say to your mates "that rotten sod from the IR, 3 years of twatting about a few hundred quid in penalties and all for mistakenly claiming a fiver". This is a hyge deterrent to reasonably honest folk.
Of course when you get the enquiry they may be easy to please.

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