Claim for a refund if you've paid HMRC too much on your PAYE bill
Get a refund if you’ve made an overpayment on your PAYE bill for the current or a previous tax year.
Who can make a claim
You can claim for a refund if you:
- have credit in your business tax account — HMRC may send you a letter to tell you about a credit
don’tdo not have credit in your business tax account but think you have overpaid
Work out why you overpaid
If you think you’ve made an overpayment, you must work out why you overpaid before you can claim for a refund.
To work out why you overpaid, compare what you’ve paid HMRC with what you owed in your tax account. You may have overpaid if your payments did not take into account:
- an overpayment carried over from a previous tax year
- statutory pay for parents that you were entitled to reclaim from a previous tax year — do not use this form for current year advance funding for statutory pay
- any repayments made to
employees,employees in a previous tax year, for example because you used the wrong taxcodecode — do not use this form to get a refund for an employee in the current tax year - any corrections to your reports
- student loan deductions
- employees who left, for example because you did not report them correctly to HMRC
- any incentive payments from HMRC to send reports online
- any Construction Industry Scheme (CIS) deductions, or if you made deductions incorrectly
You can apply for financial help if you need to give an employee a tax refund in the current tax year and cannot pay for it yourself.
You also may have overpaid if you paid HMRC:
- for the wrong tax year
- more than once for the same bill
- an estimated amount in advance
For duplicated or estimated payments, tell HMRC what you paid, what you should have paid and why you paid the additional amount.
What you’ll need
To make a claim, you’ll need to give your:
- business name, telephone number and address
- business bank account details for the repayment
- PAYE reference number
- estimated overpayment amount
You’ll also need to tell us:
- the tax year you’re claiming for
- why you overpaid
You’ll need to provide details of amounts owed or becoming due if you want us to deduct your repayment from:
- Corporation Tax — include your Corporation Tax unique tax reference
- VAT — include your registration number
- other liabilities — include type of charge and any reference numbers you have
We will request further details if your claim relates to a director. This may include:
- business bank statements
- personal bank statements
- shareholder minutes
You need to submit your claim with a completed form R38 or signed authority if you want HMRC to pay an agent or other nominated representative.
Claim online
You will only be able to claim for one tax year at a time.
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Claim by post
If you’re unable to claim online you can claim by post.
To claim by post you’ll need to gather your information and send it to HMRC in a written request marked as ‘Employers PAYE Overpayment’.
Where to send your written claim
PT Operations North East England
HM Revenue and Customs
BX9 1BX
United Kingdom
After you’ve submitted a claim
HMRC will check the details you submitted and contact you to confirm if your claim has been accepted, or to ask for any further information or supporting evidence.
HMRC will offset the amount against your PAYE bill in the current tax year. If you do not owe anything, they will offset the amount:
- against a PAYE bill from a previous tax year
- against other taxes you owe, for example Corporation Tax
You’ll only get a refund if you do not owe HMRC any tax.
If your claim is accepted, we’ll send you details about:
- when to expect your refund
- any changes to your refund amount
- any liability payments we make with the refund
Find out when to expect a reply from HMRC.
Updates to this page
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The 'work out why you overpaid' section has been updated to make it clear about not using the form to get a refund for an employee in the current tax year. Information added about applying for financial help if you cannot pay for the tax refund yourself.
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The 'Work out what you overpaid' section has been updated to make it clear about not using the form for the current tax year.
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Guidance about how to check when you can expect a reply from HMRC about your claim has been updated.
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First published.