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If
you have a UK Tax liability or responsibility you
must notify the Inland Revenue within twelve months of the end of
the Tax Year of any new source of income. The tax return for the
year to 5 April 2001 therefore needs to be filed with the Inland
Revenue by 31 January 2002.
If
the Inland Revenue receive your tax return after 30 September 2001,
but before 31 January 2002, then it is up to you to calculate your
own tax and make appropriate payments.
Under Tax Legislation, you are required to make payments as follows,
the dates relate to a tax return for the year to 5 April 2001.
| Nature
of Payment |
Due
date |
| (These
should have been paid by now) |
| 1st
Payment on account |
31
January 2001 |
| 2nd
Payment on account |
30
July 2001 |
|
|
| (To
be paid on or before 31st January 2002) |
| Balance
of payment due for 2000/2001 |
31
January 2002 |
| 1st
Payment on account for 2001/02 |
31
January 2002 |
Confused?
You will be!
The
payments on account are based on the previous tax year (5th April
2000) and on the income for the previous tax year. If you consider
that your income for the current year will be lower than that for
the previous year, then the appropriate claim has to be made to
the Revenue for a lower payment to be made.
Under
payment or late payment may lead to interest and surcharges being
imposed. Tough new tax laws that come into force for the first time
next month could land tax evaders with a six-month prison sentence
or a £5000 fine. The laws were introduced in the Finance Act
2000 and have replaced the previous system which only levied a fixed
rate fine.
It
is your duty to ensure that the tax return is complete in every
sense and that full disclosures are made to the Revenue. If you
are in any doubt then you should include any relevant information
in the tax return. This will ensure that the Revenue can then not
at a later date say that disclosures were not made to them and thereby
impose interest and penalties.
Taxation
is a complex area and you may find that the tax return and supporting
notes difficult to understand. Most people, who do not use the Inland
Revenue's Tax calculation service, use professional services. Contact
your Accountant and take appropriate legal and professional advice
in order to ensure that the filed tax return is complete and correct.
However
you cannot delegate the responsibilities of your tax affairs to
any agent or professional so some effort is required to first gather
all the necessary information.
As
an aide memoir attached is a Tax
Return Information checklist (click
here for a PDF version (61KB)). We distribute it to our clients
and provide it here, not as an exhaustive guide but merely a précis.
If you find it hard to motivate yourself, then see how many of the
questions you can tick now. Then plan to find an answer to each
question - one per day - over the next week.
Like
most financial planning, the best advice is 'DON'T LEAVE IT UNTIL
THE LAST MINUTE'!
Click
here - Tax Return Information checklist (printable version)
Click
here - Tax Return Information Checklist (PDF version).
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THE
ABOVE INFORMATION IS ONLY A BRIEF PRÉCIS OF THE FILING
REQUIREMENTS UNDER SELF-ASSESSMENT. APPROPRIATE PROFESSIONAL
ADVICE MUST BE TAKEN.
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