EIM71405 - Assessments, appeals and other procedures: assessments
Assessments not needed in most cases
Nearly all employment income tax is collected on a provisional
basis through the PAYE system using code numbers and tax tables.
Tax is deducted from wages and salaries by the employer and paid
over to the collector. The code number can take into account other
employment income from which tax cannot be deducted directly, such
as benefits in kind. Small amounts of other income can also be
effectively taxed through PAYE by setting allowances against them
and only giving any balance in the code number.
So, for most taxpayers whose income is wholly or mainly
employment income, where the PAYE coding notice is accurate and
deductions are made in accordance with cumulative tax tables, the
total net tax deducted will be correct so that no further action is
needed. (The PAYE system is designed to marginally under-deduct to
prevent large numbers of taxpayers overpaying very small amounts
and then making repayment claims.)
Assessments are not needed when PAYE gets things right in
the tax year.
In most cases where PAYE has not got things right in the tax
year, matters are sorted out informally at the year-end rather than
by assessment. Under the informal procedures that have existed for
many years, over-payments are repaid automatically and
under-payments, up to a limit (currently £2.000), are
automatically coded out for collection through PAYE in a later
year. The taxpayer is not disadvantaged in any way by the informal
procedures. The saving to HMRC is simply in administrative costs,
and the taxpayer is saved unnecessary work. These informal
procedures, which are set up under the general power given to the
Commissioners of Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs to manage
the tax system, are covered in the PAYE Manual at PAYE 93000
onwards.
However Section 711 ITEPA 2003 also gives taxpayers the
right to self assess for any year.
