HM Revenue
& Customs (HMRC) has issued an urgent alert to employers –
important PAYE changes are coming this spring, so make sure you’re
prepared for them.
HMRC is writing to all employers this month to remind then that,
from this year, they must file their Employer Annual Returns
online by the 19 May deadline – there is no longer a paper filing
option for small employers with fewer than 50 staff. So, if you
file your return on paper, even if it’s before 19 May, you could
receive a penalty.
To file online, employers must register with HMRC’s PAYE Online
service – they can do this by visiting www.hmrc.gov.uk/paye and
clicking ‘Register for PAYE Online’. Smaller employers can then
use HMRC’s own free software to file their employee data securely
online, while larger employers can purchase a range of commercial
software. Alternatively, an intermediary can file on an employer’s behalf.
Further help on employer filing is available from the HMRC
website at www.hmrc.gov.uk/paye or
from HMRC’s Employer CD-ROM, which is being sent to all employers.
Also from May 2010, HMRC is introducing new penalties for late
payment of PAYE – this includes Income Tax, National Insurance
Contributions (NICs), student loan deductions and Construction
Industry Scheme deductions.
Under these changes, employers may incur penalties if they don’t
make PAYE payments on time, and in full. The penalties will be
calculated as a percentage of the amount paid late, and, for
in-year payments, the percentage charged increases as the number
of late payments in the year increases.
Employers who think they may have difficulty paying should call
HMRC’s Business Payment Support Service, before the payment is
due, on 0845 302 1435. If they do, and HMRC agrees time to pay, it
will not charge late payment penalties – provided the business
keeps to the agreement.
More information on the new penalties can be found on the HMRC
website at www.hmrc.gov.uk/employers/paye-penalties-faqs.htm.
HMRC’s Stephen Banyard said:
“Major changes to PAYE filing and payment are only a matter of
weeks away, so employers need to make sure they’re well prepared
for them. We will be writing to affected employers over the coming
weeks, so please look out for this information, and take the time
to read it.
“One key thing to flag up at this stage is that employers do not
need to keep a hard copy of their Employer Annual Return if they
file it online themselves. As a consequence, HMRC will be reducing
its stocks of hard-copy PAYE forms – P35s and P14s. So please
carefully consider your PAYE stationery requirements before
ordering paper forms from HMRC.”
Notes to Editors
1. Each year, employers throughout the UK are required to inform
HMRC of their employees’ tax and national insurance payments for
the last financial year. Employers meet this obligation by sending
in an Employer Annual Return – a P14 for each individual employee,
and a P35 summarising the details for their entire workforce.
2. The HMRC website contains lots of information about the
different ways to pay, which may help those affected pay on time
and therefore avoid late payment penalties – visit www.hmrc.gov.uk/payinghmrc/paye.htm
for more details. In addition, businesses can visit the Business
Link website at www.businesslink.gov.uk/bdotg/action/keydates,
where they can create a calendar of key tax deadlines for the next
12 months. They can also sign up to receive regular email alerts
as each date approaches.
3. The late payment penalties will range from 1 – 5% of the late amount.
Issued by HM Revenue & Customs Press
Office
Press enquiries only please contact:
Contacts:
HMRC Out of Hours
Phone: 07860 359544
NDS.HMRC@coi.gsi.gov.uk
Jan Marszewski
Phone: 020 7147 0798
jan.marszewski@hmrc.gsi.gov.uk
Darlene Coker
Phone: 020 7147 2333
darlene.coker@hmrc.gsi.gov.uk