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-   -   HMRC get your tax code wrong (AFPS related)? (https://www.pprune.org/military-aviation/554110-hmrc-get-your-tax-code-wrong-afps-related.html)

Al R 6th Jan 2015 10:06

HMRC get your tax code wrong (AFPS related)?
 
Nicole Blackmore is senior personal finance reporter at the Telegraph. She is following up a piece about HMRC getting tax codes wrong (following service discharge) and then chasing some ex-servicemen and women for thousands in unpaid debt a few years later.

The error seems to lie with HMRC and revolves around it not processing data which was correctly supplied by the individual in good faith. I think back, and I know that I had issues with mine - it might be the case that the taxman can just not accurately input data which relates to AFPS. And if not, why not?

Although she managed to get HMRC to quash a similar claim against an ex serviceman recently which ran to a few thousand, she's now trying to scope the extent of the problem. Nicole is following this thread, so if anyone has any evidence or anecdotes about it please feel free to post them here. If you're happy for her to contact you, just message me your contact details.

Mods, not strictly aviation but definitely a mil problem. Hope you don't mind.

Voxpop, does Forpen have any info that might be useful?

OmegaV6 6th Jan 2015 10:29

Not sure if this is what is wanted or not ... but when I left 6 years ago I was dealt with by 3 different tax offices, one for RAF pension (AFPS), one for the FSAVC pension and the third for the Ministry of Justice income from the part time job.

Each Office insisted that all my Personal Tax Allowances were to be applied to the "other" incomes and all put me on Basic Rate, effectively I had no Personal Allowance for nearly 6 months!! The whole Personal Allowance "should" have been (and eventually was) applied to the RAF Pension.

HMRC always "blamed" AFPS for not giving them the correct info, but as I pointed out on several occasions, HMRC "tell" AFPS the tax code .. NOT the other way round !

Eventually resolved by recorded delivery letters to as senior a name in HMRC as I could muster, my MP, and the relevant Ministers, threatening letters to the press etc etc. I suddenly had a phone call from HMRC asking a couple of details then new tax codes and a very welcome rebate !!

The answer as given was quite simple ... Tax Offices don't converse with each other, they each do their own thing !!

HTH

Fox3WheresMyBanana 6th Jan 2015 10:46

..and boy do they do it slowly. Current reply time is over 5 months for me. They claim on their website that 2 months can be expected. Rubbish.
(Mine is a Tax/Pension issue, but not tax code)

Pontius Navigator 6th Jan 2015 11:13

Or this:
Retired Oct 10.
Sorted out VS overpayment to Jan 11
Filed tax return 10/11 in May 11.
Sep11 my union rep reminded my old boss to pay me a bonus. Received Oct 11.
Filed tax return 11/12 in May 12.
For year 12/13 IR applied all my personal allowance to my MOD salary which of course was zero and taxed my civil service pension at 50%.

Their excuse was that the MOD had said I was receiving a salary despite it being a one-off. I managed to get it sorted in-year.

Willard Whyte 6th Jan 2015 12:16

I've always had any tax 'adjustments', up or down, sorted very quickly by HMRC. I always telephone them as soon as I'm aware of any changes, or post forms as necessary. It's always been sorted within a couple of weeks - usually a couple of days if I've spoken on the 'phone.

Mind you, I'm a bit obsessive and keep a monthly-updated spreadsheet of all my income.

Fox3WheresMyBanana 6th Jan 2015 12:49

The actual repayment in my case did occur within 2 weeks, once the change had been authorised. The problem seems to be with the parts of the HMRC that review cases and make decisions. The last reply I got was 2 months after sending, and said "I'll send for your file". Nothing done, so their IN tray is at least 2 months deep. This was over 3 months ago.

Pontius Navigator 6th Jan 2015 13:36

Fox3, IIRC there is an automatic 4 week delay. After 4 weeks we rang and a young man not only agreed to send me my rebate by cheque but my wife's too. The rebates were below their automatic refund level.

Al R 6th Jan 2015 13:54

This is the piece about a military pensioner that Nicole is following up.

'Taxman error left me with £4,600 bill after retirement' - Telegraph

P6 Driver 6th Jan 2015 13:59

For me, it was a demand of £4100 in 2010. I wrote and put my case that ESC A19 applied and it was an HMRC error. I received a letter cancelling the demand following a further exchange of letters and some phone calls.


No, I'm not interested in talking to journo's about it.

Lordflasheart 6th Jan 2015 18:43

I used ESC A19 successfully for a friend who'd received a demand for £2500 uncollected PAYE back tax relating to two recent years. They allowed the earlier year and refused the more recent year because it was too soon for ESC A19 to operate. I was able to inform HMRC that the Treasury Minister had recently issued an instruction to HMRC, that where their failure to collect PAYE back tax related to the State OAP, under no circumstances were they to attempt to do so. There was no further argument. It did not matter that there was no actual apology because I discovered that the failure to collect had been going on for several previous years, though they were issuing plausible tax codes and patronising reassurance each year.

Regrettably this sort of thing is commonplace. The LITRG website provides a wealth of otherwise little known detail, not only for unrepresented low income folk, but for anyone with PAYE problems with HMRC, which enabled me to win that one. It is a philanthropic arm of the Chartered Institute of Taxation.

There is a legal precedent from a few years back which basically says that if one UK Government Department has been given the information, ALL Govt Depts are deemed to be aware of it. I imagine it should equally apply to different branches of the SAME Dept – ie HMRC. I could probably find a reference if anyone wanted.

All the above should apply equally to any UK based PAYE customer of HMRC, whether military or civvy. I have no knowledge of ex-pat stuff though.

I would add that a Tax Code is only a tax officer's best guess for the current/next year. Whether the error is large (requires dealing with now) or small (could be postponed) the true position will usually only emerge after the end of the tax year. Anyone with any doubts would be well advised to do their own calculations for verification, though some ex-colleagues of mine (civvies) who are PAYE and are not required to submit tax returns, and who should know better, still leave it to HMRC to do the annual reconciliation, and then wail ** when faced with unexpected demands when they really have no idea if the demand is correct or not. An acquaintance recently received a surprise demand for several grand .... and paid it.


** BTW I am not referring to anyone posting here about AFPS of which I have no knowledge. In any case, if reasonable self verification had been carried out, there should be no problem unless HMRC had made an error - perhaps later - or had invented raw data - as happened in a couple of my strictly amateur cases.


LFH

Lima Juliet 6th Jan 2015 19:27

Retired on a Friday in 2011 and started FTRS on the Monday.

AFPS75 lump sum in bank account by the following Friday. :ok:

Then the fun started. I started with both pension and pay on D0 (ie. 40%). So I called HMRC and the nice taxman adjusted the tax codes.

By Dec 11 the codes still didn't seem right and so I called, by this time, for the third time and the taxman finally explained that my pension should have been D0 from the start as my FTRS pay was above the 40% threshold. So he adjusted the pension to D0 and then put me on an adjusted tax code to try and sort it by Apr 12.

In Apr 12 I got a tax bill for ~£1200! :eek:

I complained that JPAC/SPVA knew how much pay and pension I had been paid in FY11/12 - the figures are available for everyone to see in various places on the internet. I stated that JPAC/SPVA had messed up my PAYE and therefore they should be liable for paying my £1.2k as they made the error - https://www.gov.uk/government/upload...ction-paye.pdf

I had a very nice note back from HMRC saying they thought that it was my fault and that I would be issued a new tax code for FY12/13 to recover the money owed. I was thus ~£100 per month down for the next year in take home. :(

I thought I had a good case where effectively the same employer had messed up my PAYE - but apparently not! :ugh:

LJ

Bannock 6th Jan 2015 20:06

Is there a time limit that once expired you cant be chased. I ask because this morning I had a tax demand from the year 2004 !!!

Pontius Navigator 6th Jan 2015 20:09

LJ, in my case, similar to yours when I retired first time, I could see the Charlie uniform and was quite happy to benefit in the short term and pay back a lump sum in their long term. In those days interest wad paid on deposit.

Fox3WheresMyBanana 6th Jan 2015 20:11

CH56100 - Assessing Time Limits: Tables of time limits for relevant taxes: Income Tax & Capital Gains Tax

Bigbux 6th Jan 2015 20:19

Sounds like I got off lightly

My pension was taxed at BR from the outset and at one stage I had tax codes for 3 different sources, all penalising my tax-free allowance on account of the others, and even adding in the other odd restriction by inference (business phone).

After a couple of years I managed to get rebates at the end of each Tax year, only to be handed a demand based on the same scenario as the one I had just been over-taxed with.

Calls to the tax office (40 mins waiting each time) would furnish me with a new set of tax codes - only to be countermanded a few days later by another set of erroneous ones.

9 years later, my accountant managed to get through to a knowledgable grown up at HMRC and has got them to accept that I declare all my income in each year's tax return - and my pension is now paid without an abatement.

The whole thing smacked of poor outsourcing; disjointed departments and a lack of expertise at the coal face - often a symptom of a poorly-specified outsourcing contract.

Sloppy Link 6th Jan 2015 20:22

I'm with Willard, not had an issue with a mil pension, a full time job and still in the Reserves so three income streams. Always kept them informed and they have always treated me right......I think.

SimonK 6th Jan 2015 20:39

Yup, happened to me too. Retired 2013, told HMRC to apply my tax code to my main, rather than pension income for that year. In 2014 they applied my tax code to both my pension income and my main income, which obviously meant I got my pension almost tax free. Very nice obviously but I got a letter soon after I noticed myself saying that my tax code for 2015 would be adjusted to account for the overpayment.

Not looking for any sympathy: it's just rubbish administration by the HMRC which needs sorting.

Stn120 6th Jan 2015 21:10

I was advised when doing resettlement, always to talk to the tax office and make sure they know your circumstances. I have always had my (commuted) pension taken out of my personal allowance and then had my salary adjusted by my employer via a tax code issued by HMRC. I have individually had to make sure my employer knows my circumstances as most do not understand how military pensions work. This has saved me a real balls ache of facing tax demands as HMRC informed me, there is no time limit for claims although they may disregard anything longer than 12 years at their discretion. Ourselves, we are supposed to keep records for a minimum of 6 years.


I do know of former colleagues who have been bitten by having the personal allowance claimed against their pensions and not informing their employers and having the same applied to their salaries and HMRC catching up with them some years later and smacking them with a large tax demand.


According to HMRC guidelines, there is no defence in ignorance as there is a great deal of information out there via their own offices, accountancy firms and financial advisors.


If you call them and state that you think your are due a rebate and provide them with the relevant information, you will get the rebate fairly swiftly as they have a service level agreement to investigate claims within a specified timescale. The taxman will also tell you all the various things you can claim for, they do not keep it to themselves (I claim for replacement uniform and uniform laundry which amounts to circa £500 per year, this comes a an adjustment to your tax code).


Just be careful, if you are economical with the truth to the taxman he will bite you and he wont believe that you were unaware of the rules.

Lima Juliet 6th Jan 2015 21:17


I was advised when doing resettlement, always to talk to the tax office and make sure they know your circumstances. I have always had my (commuted) pension taken out of my personal allowance and then had my salary adjusted by my employer via a tax code issued by HMRC. I have individually had to make sure my employer knows my circumstances as most do not understand how military pensions work. This has saved me a real balls ache of facing tax demands as HMRC informed me, there is no time limit for claims although they may disregard anything longer than 12 years at their discretion. Ourselves, we are supposed to keep records for a minimum of 6 years.
The thing is I did tell my employer, my pension provider and the tax office about my issues many times over a 3-4 month period - they still c0cked up my PAYE so that I got a tax bill! :ugh:

LJ

Al R 17th Jan 2015 10:09

Nicole's piece made the lead of today's Telegraph. If you've left, or are about to leave, don't let apathy cost you. I know she's working on some of the other feedback generated here - there's a couple of great quotes in there too. :8

Millions with multiple incomes at risk of shock tax bills - Telegraph


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