Here’s how self-assessment appeals are performed:
How to Make an Appeal
Format and timing:
- In writing within 30 days of the Notice of Liability
- HMRC allows 37 days to account for printing and postal delivery (35 days for tax years 2009-10 and earlier)
- Some appeals accepted by telephone or online with proper customer verification
- Appeals via Personal or Business Tax Account are treated as signed appeals
Who can appeal:
- The taxpayer
- Someone acting in capacity
- An authorized agent
- For partnerships: nominated partner only (or their authorized agent)
HMRC’s Internal Appeal Process
Initial handling:
- Decision Maker receives and considers the appeal
- Appeals treated as priority post at all stages
- Appeal recorded on SA system (only by Appeals Handler or Review Interest Officer)
- Acknowledgment issued using appropriate form (SA525, SA526, SA527)
- If penalty involved, charge is informally stood over pending determination
Office responsibility:
- Usually handled where received, except:
- If there’s an open or closed enquiry → goes to enquiry officer
- If office has no processing capability → forwarded to processing office
Appeal Outcomes
If HMRC agrees with you:
- Appeal allowed
- Charge cancelled/amended
- Appeal closed using MAINTAIN APPEAL function
- Standover reduced to nil
- Confirmation letter sent
If HMRC disagrees:
- Review offered (internal HMRC review by different officer)
- If you reject review → case can go to Tax Tribunal
- You can request tribunal consideration even for late appeals
Special Considerations
Reasonable excuse appeals:
- Must demonstrate circumstances prevented compliance
- Must show you acted without unreasonable delay once excuse ended
- Each case considered on individual facts and circumstances
- Common examples: serious illness, bereavement, fire/flood, HMRC system failures
Partnership appeals:
- Appeal recorded on partnership record only
- Informal standover applied to each partner’s record
- When settled, all partner records must be updated
Documentation required:
- Written appeal stating grounds
- Supporting evidence where possible (especially for reasonable excuse)
- Appeal papers filed and retained throughout process
What happens during the process:
- No automatic stay of collection (except for certain penalty types from 2010-11 onwards)
- Informal standover typically applied to prevent enforcement action
- Open Appeals Work List item created for tracking
- Regular review to ensure prompt handling
The process is designed to be accessible while maintaining proper verification and documentation standards.
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