Wednesday, 27 May 2026

HMRC Blows £175m on Fancy AI Toy from Quantexa


 

HMRC Blows £175m on Fancy AI Toy from Quantexa – Because Nothing Says “We’ve Fixed Customer Service” Like Another Expensive Tech Fantasy

Morning, you long-suffering taxpayers still stuck on hold for an hour, waiting two years for a refund, or filling in quarterly MTD returns while HMRC’s own staff take half a million sick days.

In their latest act of breathtaking delusion, HM Revenue and Customs has just signed a 10-year, £175 million deal with British tech firm Quantexa. That’s £17.5 million a year of your money going on some AI-powered wizardry that’s supposedly going to magically transform the taxman from a national embarrassment into a sleek, efficient machine.

Quantexa’s system will hoover up HMRC’s data, mix it with external sources, and then – allegedly – help spot fraud, hidden company networks, and even “fix unintentional errors” faster. It’ll also supposedly assist customer service staff. Yes, the same customer service that’s been in freefall for years.

Let me translate the corporate bollocks into plain English:

HMRC admits their performance is so dire that public dissatisfaction is rising, so instead of fixing the basics — answering the bloody phone, processing refunds in less than 18 months, or stopping phantom £2.8 billion demands to corner shops — they’ve decided to throw £175 million at an AI system.

This is classic HMRC behaviour. Their IT track record is legendary for all the wrong reasons (remember Fujitsu? Horizon? The endless MTD delays?). Now they’re banking on AI to do what competent management and proper staffing have failed to do for over a decade.

Here’s what this shiny new toy will actually be brilliant at:

  • Finding more ways to hammer small businesses and self-employed people for minor errors
  • Spotting “suspicious” expense claims from sole traders earning £60k
  • Building even bigger databases on every one of us
  • Generating more automated penalty points

And here’s what it almost certainly won’t fix:

  • The hour-long hold music torture
  • Two-year refund delays
  • Deadline day phone hang-ups
  • Pension tax calculation cock-ups
  • Trivial £47 demands to pensioners

£175 million. That’s enough to answer the phones properly for years. Enough to sort the backlog. Enough to give decent service to the people who actually pay their wages. Instead, it’s going on another grand “digital transformation” project that will probably end up costing double and delivering half while some consultants laugh all the way to the bank.

This is what happens when a failing organisation refuses to admit the problem is management, culture, and accountability — not lack of fancy tech.

Tax does have to be taxing.
But when HMRC spends £175 million on AI to “improve performance” while the basics remain an absolute disgrace, it’s not taxing — it’s institutional denial on an industrial scale.

Well done, JP Marks and the rest of the gang. Another shiny toy to play with while the public seethes.

Amazon “HMRC AI Overlords Survival Kit” Suggestions
(affiliate links – because you’ll need these while the robots come for your records)


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Tuesday, 26 May 2026

Monday, 25 May 2026

HMRC Rules That Deployment of a Reservist To Ukraine Constituted a "Break"


 

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Friday, 22 May 2026

Rachel's Summertime Specials



 

Now that Rachel is dishing out VAT discounts on kids' meals, I assume a task force will be set up in HMRC to produce reams of documents analysing exactly what a kid's meal is?

Good luck with that then!

Oh, and although Rachel trumpeted this, she hasn't been so vocal about plans to whack 20% on various airport charges over the summertime! 

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Monday, 18 May 2026

FACTOID Re The BMW FOI

I know the name of the person who raised the BMW FOI and followed up on it, let me be 100% clear it was not whoever it is going under the moniker "Exposing The Corrupt". 

Thank you for your attention in this matter. 

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

People Smuggling Under The Very Noses of HMRC


 

This report from the BBC (see extract below) highlights large cash payments being made in highstreet shops for smuggling illegals into the UK, these payments are meant to be picked up by HMRC as part of their AML monitoring procedures.

HMRC supervises many "high-risk" businesses for AML compliance, including money service businesses (MSBs), informal value transfer systems (like hawala-style operations), high-cash businesses (car washes, phone shops, wholesalers), and others. These are exactly the types of entities named in the BBC report.

Wake up guys! 

People smugglers are directing migrants to pay for illegal Channel crossings using a network of UK-registered businesses, a BBC investigation has found.

We secretly filmed staff at a shop in south-east London telling an undercover researcher that nearly £3,000 in cash could be deposited with them and sent to a smuggler in France.

"You put your money here. If your friends reach [the UK], you shouldn't come back," we were told at the mobile phone store in Woolwich.

Our three-month investigation gives insight into how smugglers appear to be using UK companies' bank accounts to facilitate small-boat crossings - something a leading expert in criminal finance told us he had not seen before.

Our findings suggest a "brazen attitude" by smugglers, says Tom Keatinge, from the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi) security think tank.

"It is a concern that... people feel sufficiently confident they can be out in the open."

As well as the phone shop, the smuggler in France provided the bank account details of two UK-registered companies, which he said could both take electronic transfers for migrant crossings.

One is a wholesale business in Newcastle upon Tyne, the other is a car wash in Cambridgeshire.

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"