The Tax Administration Framework Review: New ways to tackle non-compliance
- From:
- HM Revenue & Customs
- Published
- 30 October 2024
- Last updated
- 28 April 2025 — See all updates
Read the full outcome
Detail of outcome
The government has published a summary of responses to the consultation ‘The Tax Administration Framework Review: New ways to tackle non compliance’, which explored ways to simplify and modernise HMRC’s approach to correcting taxpayer inaccuracies. The government is grateful to those who contributed their views, evidence, and time to respond.
The response document provides a summary of these views and feedback, as well as setting out the government response and next steps for HMRC which includes further considering reform of revenue correction powers, approaches to taxpayer self-correction and longer-term work to develop and test policy options to harmonise and simplify compliance powers across tax regimes.
Original consultation
Summary
We welcome views on whether HMRC’s approach to correcting taxpayer inaccuracies in a claim or return could be improved.
This consultation closesran atfrom
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Consultation description
This consultation forms part of the government’s commitment to modernising and reforming the tax administration framework. The government welcomes engagement from any individual or organisation with views on how HMRC tackles non-compliance and how this could be made more efficient and effective.
We are considering two areas for potential improvement: changes to HMRC’s existing powers and processes, and the potential for a new power to require taxpayers to correct mistakes themselves.
Documents
Consultation description
This consultation forms part of the government’s commitment to modernising and reforming the tax administration framework. The government welcomes engagement from any individual or organisation with views on how HMRC tackles non-compliance and how this could be made more efficient and effective.
We are considering two areas for potential improvement: changes to HMRC’s existing powers and processes, and the potential for a new power to require taxpayers to correct mistakes themselves.
Documents
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Updates to this page
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Published outcome and summary of responses.
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First published.
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Update history
2025-04-28 14:28
Published outcome and summary of responses.
2024-10-30 13:59
First published.