Let’s build on the same example and show exactly how HMRC charges interest and penalties if you pay late under Self Assessment
Example: Late Payment Interest & Penalties under Self Assessment
We’ll continue with your 2024/25 example:
| Type of payment | Due date | Amount |
| 1st Payment on Account | 31 Jan 2025 | £6,000 |
| 2nd Payment on Account | 31 Jul 2025 | £6,000 |
| Balancing Payment | 31 Jan 2026 | £1,500 |
Step 1 – Interest for Late Payment
HMRC charges daily interest from the day after payment was due until the day it’s actually paid.
- Rate: Based on the Bank of England base rate + 2.5% (as of 2025, that’s typically around 7.75% per year, but it can change quarterly).
Example:
If you paid your £6,000 July instalment 60 days late and the rate was 7.75%:
[
Interest = £6,000 × 7.75% × \frac{60}{365} = £76.16
]
You’d owe £6,076.16 total.
Step 2 – Late Payment Penalties
Since 2010–11, HMRC applies Late Payment Penalties under Schedule 56 FA 2009 — these are separate from interest.
They apply to any unpaid Self Assessment tax, including balancing payments and payments on account.
| Days Late | Penalty % of tax unpaid |
| 30 days late | 5% |
| 6 months late | Additional 5% |
| 12 months late | Further 5% |
Example:
You didn’t pay your £1,500 balancing payment due on 31 January 2026 until 15 August 2026 — that’s 197 days late.
→ Penalty timeline:
- After 30 days (2 March 2026): 5% × £1,500 = £75
- After 6 months (31 July 2026): another 5% × £1,500 = £75
- Total penalty by payment date = £150
- Plus interest for ~197 days (~£63 at 7.75%)
So you’d owe £1,713 total (£1,500 + £150 + £63 interest).
Step 3 – Summary
| Component | Description | Amount |
| Tax | Balancing payment due | £1,500 |
| Interest | 197 days @ 7.75% | £63 |
| Penalties | 2 × 5% | £150 |
| Total payable | £1,713 |
Key Tips
- Always pay by 31 January and 31 July to avoid both interest and penalties.
- You can make advance payments or set up a Budget Payment Plan through your HMRC online account.
- If you can’t pay in full, contact HMRC for a Time to Pay arrangement — this pauses further penalties, though interest still runs.
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