The
Importance Of Your Tax
Return
A tax return is a form that must be
filled in for the Inland Revenue ( now HM revenue and Customs)
with details of things like your income. From the tax return,
the amount of tax you are liable for is calculated.
If a tax
return is issued you have a legal liability to fill the
thing in. If not you will have a £100 penalty issued. Those
individuals who complete returns using software are sent a
notice advising them that a tax return is due. If a taxpayer is
not issued with a tax return but has tax due they should notify
HMRC who may then issue a return.Preparing a tax return is one
of those things we tend to build up in our minds as a big deal,
when it doesn't have to be. It's like painting the living room.
Prepare and lodge your own tax return
electronically.
A tax return is sometimes required for
other reasons, for example to check if the correct tax has been
paid overall. So if you are sent a tax return, you must fill it
in and send it back even if you believe that you have no extra
tax to pay. A tax return is a document filed with HMRC that
declares a taxpayers liability for being taxed, based on their
yearly income. Three outcomes are possible from filing a tax
return: either the taxpayer has either been charged too much or
too little for their income, or they have been charged the
correct amount. A tax return is a form on which you are asked
to report your income and capital gains, and give details of
reliefs and allowances claimed, for a particular tax year. The
tax year runs from 6 April to 5 April, and the tax return
covering the year ended 5 April 2008 is sometimes called the
'2008 tax return', or the return for 2007/08.It applies to
taxpayers who are identified as requiring a tax return and who
are issued with a notice to file or a paper self assessment tax
Return incorporating a notice to file. It also applies to
people who make a claim outside a tax return. If you are newly
self-employed it is not enough simply to file a tax return by
October 31 for the tax year in which you became self-employed.
You must tell HMRC that you have started to work for yourself
within three months of doing so - you face a fine of £100 if
you don't. Further, at death, the executor of your estate must
also file an Estate Tax return.
HMRC have 12 months from the date of
filing the return in which to open an enquiry, provided that
the tax return is submitted by the applicable deadline for the
method used. If a return is submitted after the deadline for
that method, HMRC have up to and until the quarter day
following the first anniversary of the date the return was
filed, in which to open an enquiry. HMRC may sometimes refer to
such cases as ‘investigations’, in order to distinguish them
from enquiries pursued under the S9A powers. In such cases HMRC
have to rely on the information powers in TMA70/S20 to support
the investigation or seek a Regulation 10 notice (General
Commissioners (Jurisdiction and Procedure) Regulations 1994 –
SI1994/1812) from the Commissioners in an appeal hearing.
HMRC's local office structure has been dismantled but the new
structures do not appear to provide adequate support
mechanisms. There is little doubt that this issue is the
biggest single cause for concern among tax technicians and
accountants, who represent the largest number of qualified tax
advisers in the UK, many of whom deal with HMRC on a very
regular basis. Remember that if you do file your tax return on
time and do not breach rules you are far less likely to attract
the attention of the HMRC investigators.
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Consultation Call 0845
6432954 Or Apply
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