Hello you poor sods still trying to get through to HMRC without developing a stress-related condition of your own. Just when you thought the helpline hell, refund delays, and phantom penalty notices couldn't get any worse, along comes the latest Civil Service sickness absence data dump – quietly released on 16 December 2025, right before everyone buggers off for Christmas.
And guess what? The taxman’s own troops are leading the charge in the great British sickie stakes.
Fresh FOI figures show HMRC staff racked up a staggering 551,064 sick days between August 2024 and July 2025. That's over half a million working days lost – equivalent to every single one of their 66,000-odd employees taking more than eight days off sick each. Down slightly from the year before, mind, but still a whopping great hole in the workforce that's meant to be collecting your taxes and answering your calls.
While you're sitting on hold listening to that godawful panpipe version of Greensleeves for the umpteenth time, wondering why nobody picks up, spare a thought for the absent armies at HMRC. Phones ringing off the hook in empty offices, queries piling up like unpaid VAT returns, refunds taking two years because there's nobody there to process them. Coincidence? Pull the other one.
This isn't just a bad cold going round – it's a chronic case of "can't be arsed" compounded by generous paid sick leave policies that make the private sector look like Victorian workhouses. Nearly half of long-term absences across the Civil Service are now down to mental health – fair enough in many cases, but when it translates to deserted desks and degraded service for the rest of us, something stinks worse than an overdue self-assessment.
And remember, these are the same people who'll hammer you with penalties for filing a day late, while they swan off on full pay for weeks on end. You try telling HMRC you've got "stress" from dealing with their shambles – see how much sympathy that gets you.
No wonder customer service is in the toilet. No wonder small businesses get chased for imaginary billions. No wonder the backlog is biblical. When the workforce treats sick leave like extra holiday, the taxpayers foot the bill – in longer waits, higher errors, and more incompetence all round.
Tax does have to be taxing.
But thanks to HMRC's absentee champions, it's become a full-time job just trying to speak to someone who isn't "off sick" today.
Amazon "Coping With HMRC Helpline Hell" Suggestions
(affiliate links – because you'll need these while waiting for an adviser who might actually turn up)
- Premium Noise-Cancelling Headphones – drown out the hold music before you lose the will to live
- Stress Ball Set – squeeze HMRC's face (imaginary, of course)
- Giant Hourglass Timer – time your next one-hour wait accurately
- "Do Not Disturb – Dealing With HMRC" Door Sign – for when you're finally on the call
- Strong Coffee. Very strong.
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"
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According to the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development the average sick days in the UK last year was 9.4. So HMRC are better than the average.
ReplyDeleteOfficial ONS data (from the Labour Force Survey) shows a national average of 4.4 days lost per worker in 2024
ReplyDeleteI wonder why sickness absence at HMRC is so much higher than in the real world
DeleteSo the ONS figures and FOI figures relate to different periods of time. ONS does not go beyond a date in 2024, the FOI response covers absences up to July 2025.
ReplyDeleteNobody ever asks 'Why'?
ReplyDeleteThe sick levels are high because of how the staff are treated, micro managed, endless targets and over load. No matter what you do in there, it isn't enough..Day after Day.
How many are off with Chest Infections? Very few I reckon.
If anyone thinks staff are lazy, please feel free to work on the Call Centres for 6 months and we'll chat about the state of your mental health let's see how long you last without phoning in sick.
Have a go at the senior management, SCS, government dog shit by all means, not the staff
2010 HMRC 90k staff 2025 HMRC 60k staff. A third fewer staff with more people brought into the tax system. Don't blame the staff blame the 14 years of austerity. Name 2 public service better now than it was before the Tories started cutting.
ReplyDeleteTheir laziness causes real world harm to taxpayers, business and the entire economy.
ReplyDeleteIf you sacked 50% of the worst performing HMRC employees, we'd not notice any difference.
So if you sacked 50% of staff in the call centres there'd be no difference in waiting time.
DeleteThinking things through isn't really your strong point is it?
I agree they need to sack the layabouts who are otherwise unemployable
DeleteIt was ever thus. The private sector creates wealth. The public sector consumes wealth. The difference in productivity levels is obvious.
DeleteWhat is the 'productivity' level in a school or hospital.
DeleteWhat would the productivity level be in a private sector equivalent of HMRC.
How many layabouts are there working in your local A&E.
How many days are lost due to the bullying, harassment and violence faced by the workforce (most of it from their own colleagues!)?
ReplyDeleteDon't blame the sick, blame the lawbreakers and management - and the PCS Union which helps to facilitate the violent culture.
I'm sure he spent an hour in a queue hanging on the phone as well
ReplyDeleteThis is what we're up against..
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/tax/news/david-lammy-claimed-almost-7000-on-expenses-for-tax-returns/
Almost 5000 Self Assessment scams alone, with over 135,000 HMRC related scams.
ReplyDeleteNot to worry, I'm sure HMRC are completely on the ball with this.
Time for a gong.. Most scammed civil service department award goes to... Drumroll.. HMRC!
https://www.bournemouthecho.co.uk/news/25705914.taxpayers-urged-remain-vigilant-scams-ramp/
They need to deal with the criminals working inside HMRC urgently
DeleteLet's see where this goes. I'd be interested in what qualifies as value for money when hundreds of millions of our money has been pissed up the wall over the last twenty years.
ReplyDeleteAn obscene amount of money. The government contract gravy train trundles along. It's one big club and we aren't in it
https://www.computerweekly.com/news/366636654/Jilted-Fujitsu-replaced-by-Netcompany-in-HMRC-relationship