PSA1140 - Overview of PAYE Settlement Agreements
What Employers Should Tell Employees About PSAs
PSAs are agreements between employers and HMRC. The normal rules
of confidentiality prevent you giving employees information about
what is included in their employer’s PSA.
Employees may contact you because they are uncertain whether
particular items should be included in their own tax return or
whether they have been included in the employers PSA.
Where this happens you should refer the employee to their
employer for the information.
Whilst there is no statutory requirement for employers to
tell employees what is in their PSA you should encourage employers
to do so by explaining that this may reduce the number of queries
they receive from employees who are completing their own tax
returns.
The information employers provide to their employees need not
be particularly detailed. You should advise employers,
- to say something like ‘I am paying tax on the (enter items) for the tax year (enter year). If you received any of these items in that tax year you do not need to put them on your tax return.’
- that it is not necessary for employees to be told individually which items are included in a PSA, though there is nothing to stop the employer doing so.
- that they should make this information available to their employees either on commencement of the PSA, or at the end of each tax year.
