Sunday, 19 July 2026

HMRC Tax Investigations Taking Up To Eight Bloody Years


 

HMRC Tax Investigations Taking Up To Eight Bloody Years – MPs Slam the Taxman’s Endless Dithering

Still waiting for HMRC to get their act together?

While the taxman loves slapping you with automatic penalties for filing a day late, it turns out their own investigations can drag on for the best part of a decade.

The Public Accounts Committee has rightly slammed HMRC for cases taking up to eight years to resolve. Eight years! That’s not an investigation, that’s a slow-motion torture session for the poor sods stuck in limbo. Businesses left hanging, cashflow destroyed, growth choked, while HMRC faffs about “gathering evidence” at a pace that would make a snail look speedy.

MPs are warning that the public is being left completely in the dark about whether these long-running disputes are being settled fairly. No transparency, no accountability, just endless uncertainty. Perfect.

This is the same shambolic outfit that:

  • Can’t answer the phone without putting you through an hour of Vivaldi
  • Harasses 93-year-old terminally ill veterans over returns they’ve already filed
  • Spends £186 million to recover £44 million on the Loan Charge
  • Forces quarterly MTD reporting while their own systems remain a joke

Yet when it comes to their own enquiries (especially the big, complex ones involving serious money) they’re happy to let cases rumble on for years. Meanwhile, you’re expected to respond to their information requests in days or face penalties.

The PAC is urging HMRC to get a grip and speed things up. About bloody time someone said it. These delays aren’t just inconvenient, they’re damaging real businesses, destroying livelihoods, and eroding any remaining trust in the system.

Tax does have to be taxing.

But leaving people and companies in investigation hell for up to eight years while demanding instant compliance from everyone else? That’s not taxing, that’s bureaucratic sadism and a national disgrace.

Sort it out, HMRC. Or better yet, stop starting so many enquiries you can’t finish in a reasonable timeframe.


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"

Tuesday, 14 July 2026

HMRC’s Annual Report 2025/26


 

HMRC’s Annual Report 2025/26: Record Tax Haul, Shiny Digital Stats, But The Same Old Customer Service Shambles

HMRC has just dropped its 329-page annual report for 2025/26, and true to form, they’re out there blowing their own trumpet while the rest of us choke on the reality.

They collected a whopping £966.4 billion in tax — that’s £90.4 billion more than the previous year. Compliance yield smashed through £50 billion for the first time. Digital interactions are up to 78%. They’ve hired more compliance officers. Everything’s going swimmingly, right?

Bollocks!

Scratch beneath the glossy headlines and the strains are bleeding through everywhere. Yes, they’re raking in more cash (largely thanks to Reeves’ stealth taxes, frozen thresholds, and employer NI hikes) but the basics that actually matter to real people remain an absolute disgrace.

Customer service? Still in the toilet. They only managed to answer 85.1% of calls (one in seven went unanswered), with average wait times of over 12 minutes. They’re proudly pushing everyone towards webchats and the “highly successful” HMRC app while real human help remains a distant dream. This is the same department that hangs up on Self Assessment deadline day and harasses 93-year-old terminally ill veterans.

Tax debt sits at £44.7 billion. They’re resolving more of it, sure, but it’s still a monumental pile of unpaid tax while they chase pensioners for peanuts. The tax gap? Still hovering around £60 billion. Small businesses (the ones actually trying to grow) remain the biggest contributors to the gap — funny how that works when HMRC makes compliance such a nightmare.

R&D tax relief errors and fraud are so bad the accounts had to be qualified again. Yet they’re happy to sit on legitimate startup R&D claims for months, leaving businesses £95k out of pocket.

The transformation roadmap? More MTD misery, more AI toys (£175m with Quantexa), more digital-first bullshit while the phone lines stay broken and trust collapses. Only 70% of small businesses trust HMRC. For individuals it’s even worse, over half don’t trust them at all.

This report perfectly exposes the HMRC delusion: they’re getting better at squeezing more tax out of us, but utterly failing at basic service, fairness, and competence.

Tax does have to be taxing.

But when HMRC crows about record revenues and digital progress while the public endures endless delays, incompetence, and contempt? That’s not taxing — that’s institutional arrogance funded by your money.

Well done on the big numbers, lads. Now try answering the bloody phone.

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, 13 July 2026

Monthly Tax Bills For The Self Employed - A Disaster Waiting To Happen!


 

Labour is examining plans which would require self‑employed workers and landlords to pay tax every month from April 2030, in a major shift to how millions manage their finances.

Under the proposals, HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) would calculate monthly payments using an individual’s previous year’s tax return.

The reforms are expected to apply only to those earning above a threshold that has not yet been set. 

This will be a monumental clusterfuck! 

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"

Thursday, 9 July 2026

Over 580,000 Not Yet Signed Up To MTD

 


Over 580,000 self-employed workers and landlords have yet to sign up for HMRC's Making Tax Digital for Income Tax scheme, despite less than a month remaining before the August 7 registration deadline.

A Freedom of Information request has revealed that of the 864,000 people required to register for the scheme by April 6 this year, only 282,637 had signed up by May 20.

The figures, obtained by international accountancy firm Azets and confirmed by HMRC, show that around two-thirds of those required to join the new digital tax system had not yet registered when the data was compiled.

 Good luck everyone! 

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"

Wednesday, 8 July 2026

How Very Suspicious - HMRC is Meant To Be Politically Neutral!


An HMRC spokesman said: 

“We have postponed the publication to allow for the completion of a review of some of the key assumptions underpinning the estimates in the bulletin".
 

Burnham has clearly intervened!  

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, 6 July 2026

How HMRC Can Stop Cash Payment Tax Evasion


 

Never let it be said that I am not helpful.

Here, courtesy of Aakash Gupta, is a simple method HMRC can employ to reduce the problem of cash payment tax evasion.

Taiwan solved tax evasion in 1951 with a trick so cheap it should embarrass every tax authority on the planet. 

The problem was an all-cash economy full of small shops. A merchant pockets the cash, skips the receipt, and the sale never existed. Auditors can't catch what was never recorded, and hiring enough of them to watch every noodle stand costs more than the missing tax. 

So finance chief Ren Xianqun flipped the incentive. Print a lottery number on every receipt. Draw winners every two months on live TV. Top prize today: NT$10 million, about $310K. 

Suddenly the customer and the shopkeeper want opposite things. The merchant wants the sale off the books. The customer wants the ticket. And there are millions more customers than merchants. 

Every transaction now carries a built-in witness demanding the paper trail. Year one, reported tax revenue jumped 75%, from NT$29 million to NT$51 million. Seventy-five years later, roughly 70% of Taiwanese still play. 

Convenience stores redeem the smallest NT$200 prizes at the register, so even a coffee receipt feels like a scratch card. The elegant part is what the audit force costs. The prize pool runs about NT$7 billion a year, roughly $20 million. In exchange, the government gets 23 million unpaid auditors working every checkout line in the country, forever. 

No inspector general on earth delivers that coverage at that price. 

Greece, Italy, Portugal, and Slovakia all copied it. The most effective compliance tool ever built looks like a game, and that's exactly why it works.

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