EM4001 - Interest: Introduction
The following pages give guidance on interest for late payment of IT, Class 4 NICs, CGT and CT. The word “tax” should be read as incorporating all.
Basic Principles
Interest accrues on a daily basis
Interest is charged at the prescribed rate (regulations under
S178 FA 1989) for each day from a date specified in the particular
legislation until the date the tax is actually paid.
Note: The due date for payment is not always the
same as the relevant date for interest – see
EM4010.
Liability to pay interest arises automatically
The current legislation provides that the tax “shall
carry interest” from the specified date until payment. If tax
is paid late, interest follows automatically.
There is no right of appeal against interest
Any interest “objections” should be referred to
the DMB Interest Review Unit following the guidance in the Self
Assessment Manual / COM manual as appropriate – see
EM4040.
Note: the taxpayer’s rights are protected:
the underlying tax can be appealed, and if the tax is reduced the
interest on that tax will automatically be reduced.
There is no statutory power to mitigate interest
See
EM4040
Interest is in no sense a penalty
Interest is restitution for loss of use of money over time,
like any commercial interest. If the taxpayer has enjoyed the use
of the money over a period when the exchequer should have had it,
he pays this interest for that use just as he would pay his bank
interest for a loan or overdraft. Interest is compensatory, not
penal.
