Site icon Steve J Bicknell Tel 01202 025252

5 million paid the wrong tax last year – is your tax code right?

As reported last year by the Telegraph –

Five million people may have been billed incorrectly by HMRC.

You’ll find your tax code on:

Among those most likely to be affected are veterans who have taken a civilian job after leaving the Armed Forces, but who also draw a military pension. Pensioners with two pensions and those who have continued to work part-time after retirement are also more likely to be hit.

Taxpayers, who must complete their self-assessment tax returns before Jan 31, are being warned to check their paperwork again to make sure they are not affected.

Problems arise because various tax offices around Britain are failing to share information about taxpayers’ incomes on a central database.

People with more than one income, whether from pensions, PAYE employment or a mixture of the two, are being allocated their personal tax-free allowance multiple times. It means the tax codes issued for their various income sources are incorrect, so not enough tax is taken. Often the mistakes are discovered by HMRC years later, leading to unexpected tax demands. Telegraph

If you think your Tax Code is wrong you should tell HMRC as soon as possible using online form P2

https://online.hmrc.gov.uk/shortforms/form/P2

You can check how your tax using this HMRC link

https://www.gov.uk/check-income-tax

The most common tax code for tax year 2015 to 2016 is 1060L (£10,600 being the annual income tax free allowance for 2015/16) – in 2014 to 2015 it was 1000L. It’s used for most people born after 5 April 1938 with one job and no untaxed income, unpaid tax or taxable benefits (eg company car).

steve@bicknells.net

Exit mobile version