HMRC has named over 4,000 deliberate tax defaulters since 2015, collectively owing more than £1.5 billion.
These individuals or firms were penalised for deliberate errors in tax returns or failing to meet tax obligations. Here is the sector breakdown:
Hospitality: 21% of defaulters (e.g. takeaways, pubs, cafes).
Construction & Trades: 19% (e.g. plumbing, plastering).
Recruitment/Payroll firms: 5 of the top 10 defaulters, owing £145 million.
Haulage & Freight: 112 defaulters owing £33.5 million.
Metals & Recycling: Notably concentrated in Yorkshire, with £60.4 million owed.
Other sectors include adult entertainment (£783k) and barristers (£523k).
The campaign aims to deter tax evasion and increase transparency. HMRC publishes names only after penalties are final. Defaulters can avoid being listed if they
fully disclose their defaults. HMRC also stated that the list only includes those penalised under civil procedures and does not include criminal convictions for
tax fraud.
The think-tank TaxWatch warns that the £1.5bn figure may be just the ‘tip of the iceberg’, especially with offshore income potentially escaping HMRC’s radar. They
added that “HMRC has the power to fine and name tax advisers who deliberately conceal documents or provide misleading information about their clients’ affairs. Yet
between 2020
and 2024 we found that HMRC started substantive investigations against fewer than five dishonest tax advisers in each year, and at the moment it doesn’t publish
the names of any tax advisers fined for dishonesty.”
You may also like...
-
Saturday, January 4, 2025Read moreTax break scheme for second homeowners axed
The furnished holiday lettings tax regime is on the verge of being abolished.
Reforms were announced under the previous Conservative ...
-
Tuesday, March 11, 2025Read moreTax evasion crackdown on dodgy employers
The crackdown targets fraudulent use of “umbrella companies” – sometimes legitimate but often used by rogue operators who fai...
-
Saturday, January 4, 2025Read moreTax commitment finally set to change after 25 years
A 25-year UK tax commitment related to Income Tax is set to be axed from next month.
As the new tax year begins on 6 April 2025, rule...

