When are late penalty points wiped off HMRC’s system?
HMRC will now issue a VAT penalty point for each late VAT return you submit and persistent lateness will lead to financial penalties. But what action can you take to wipe these points off your online account with HMRC?
-
New HMRC guidance on winter fuel payments
HMRC has released new guidance on the recovery of winter fuel payments. What do you need to know?
-
Festive tax breaks for remote workers
You’re familiar with the tax break for Christmas parties but you now have a few remote workers, and the company will need to reimburse their travel and accommodation costs if they attend an event. Which costs count towards the tax-free limit and how can you manage any overspend?
-
New process for some exports starting in Northern Ireland
Starting next month, businesses that import goods via Northern Ireland will need to change their processes. What do you need to know?
Two separate regimes
For VAT periods beginning on or after 1 January 2023, two separate VAT penalty regimes took effect, one for late VAT payments and the other for the submission of late returns. You need to treat the two systems as completely independent, i.e. there is no overlap.
For late returns, you will incur a penalty point for each late return submitted by your business, and then incur a £200 VAT penalty when you reach your points threshold. This is four points if you submit quarterly returns; two points if you use the annual accounting scheme; five points if you submit monthly returns.
You will get a £200 penalty for the period when you reach your points threshold, not the following period. Repayment and nil returns are both subject to points and penalties.
There is a cash-flow advantage in submitting your repayment returns on time. Why not consider if you can submit them before the deadline dates to get your repayments even quicker?
Submit returns on time for a year
If you’ve reached your points threshold and incurred a £200 penalty, you must avoid making any more late submissions because you will incur a further £200 penalty for each subsequent offence. However, you can wipe the slate clean and return to zero points if you meet two conditions:
- you must submit all returns on time for twelve months after reaching the relevant points threshold. This period extends to 24 months if you submit annual returns and six months for monthly returns; and
- all your returns for the previous 24 months have been submitted.
Example. Surveyor Sam submitted his 2023 quarterly returns late and incurred a £200 penalty for the December 2023 period when he reached the four points threshold. He must submit all returns on time until December 2024 (the next four returns) otherwise each late return will incur a further £200 penalty. If he has a clean slate until December 2024, and has also submitted all returns for the previous two-year period, he will return to zero points again.
Points wiped off after two years
Imagine the following situation: you submit three late quarterly returns in 2023, so do not incur a penalty because you have not reached the four points threshold. You then have a long period of compliance and do not submit another late return until 2026. Does that mean you will get a £200 penalty in 2026 because you have now reached four points?
Good news - HMRC’s computer system will automatically wipe all points from your account when they are two years old. This common-sense approach is intended to prevent historic failures and occasional recent failures awkwardly combining to cause a financial penalty. So, by the time you submit your late 2026 return, you will be down to zero points again, so will incur no penalty.
You can appeal against any penalty point issued by HMRC if you had a reasonable excuse for submitting a late return, e.g. due to serious illness or bereavement.





This website uses both its own and third-party cookies to analyze our services and navigation on our website in order to improve its contents (analytical purposes: measure visits and sources of web traffic). The legal basis is the consent of the user, except in the case of basic cookies, which are essential to navigate this website.