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1 Coverage: United Kingdom Theme: The Economy Income Tax Receipts Statistics Released: 24 July 2015 Next release: Summer 2016 Frequency of release: Annual Media contact: HMRC press office Statistical contact: David Whitaker Tel: KAI Personal Taxes HM Revenue & Customs 100 Parliament Street London SW1A 2BQ Income tax receipts, repayments and tax credits. Website: tics/income-tax-receipts.htm
2 Income Tax Receipts Statistics July 2015 Contents Page 1. Introduction What is income tax? What is the difference between income tax receipts and income tax liabilities statistics? What information does this publication cover? Who might be interested in this publication? Rounding Revisions strategy and revisions made in this publication User engagement Income Tax Receipts Statistics Tables... 8 Table 2.8:... 8 Table 2.9: Statistical Commentary Summary of key statistics Latest figures available Overall trends in time series Table Table Annex A: Data sources, methodology and data quality... 18
3 Key Findings in this Release Total net income tax receipts in were 6.2bn (4.0%) higher than in This is largely attributable to a 4.8bn increase in PAYE income tax receipts and a 2.8bnincrease in Self Assessment income tax receipts, offset by reductions of 0.4bn and 0.1bn in receipts respectively from Tax Deductible Scheme for Interest (TDSI) and other tax deducted from source. The negative income tax components of Working Family Tax Credit (WTFC), Child Tax Credit (CTC), Disabled Persons Tax Credit (DPTC) and Working Tax Credit (WTC) have been reclassified as public expenditure within the National Accounts; this change has also been applied retrospectively to tax credits in earlier years. Income tax receipts fell sharply in due to the economic recession following the international financial crisis. They are now above their peak. About These Statistics This is a National Statistics publication produced by HM Revenue and Customs using receipts information from HMRC s administrative systems. For more information on National Statistics and governance of statistics produced by public bodies please see the UK Statistics Authority website: The tables in this publication show aggregated income tax receipts, repayments and tax credits figures on an annual basis. New or Updated Statistics in this Release These statistics were published on 24 July Figures for are consistent with the HMRC Trust Statement. 1 Statistics for will be published in summer 2016 (following publication of the Trust Statement, timing to be confirmed). 1 The Trust Statement for is available online: https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/446134/hmrc_annual _Report_and_Accounts_ Print_version_.pdf 3
4 1. Introduction 1.1 What is income tax? Income tax is a tax on an individual s income over the course of a tax year (6th April to 5th April the following year). Income tax is the UK Government s largest single source of tax revenue. The amount of income tax an individual should pay, their tax liability, is determined by a number of factors: their level of income, the type of income and the level of allowance to which they are entitled. Most sources of income are liable for income tax and adding all these sources together for an individual will give their total income assessable for tax for the tax year. There are some sources of income that are not liable for tax and will not contribute towards an individual s taxable income. These sources include some social security benefits and income from some tax efficient savings vehicles (e.g. Individual Savings Accounts and some National Savings & Investment products). Tax reliefs are available for contributions to pension schemes and donations to charities. Taxpayers receive an allowance for an amount of income they can receive without tax being charged on it, although from this is reduced or fully withdrawn for taxpayers with high incomes. This allowance is dependent on the individual s age and income. Individuals aged 65 74, and 75 and over receive higher allowances than those aged under 65, although this is reduced by 1 for every 2 above the income limit ( 25,400 for ) (but as a general rule not below the amount of the personal allowance for someone aged under 65). All individuals, regardless of their age, with an income above 100,000 have their allowance reduced by 1 for every 2 of the excess until it is withdrawn completely. People who are registered as blind in England and Wales, or who in Scotland and Northern Ireland cannot do any work for which eyesight is essential, can claim blind person s allowance. The rate of tax charged on a given 1 of income depends on the source of that income and the individual s total income for the tax year. There are three different sources of income for tax purposes: All income other than savings and dividends. This is often referred to as earned income and it includes pay from employment but also profits from self-employment, pensions, taxable benefits and income from property Savings income (e.g. bank and building society interest) Dividends The general rule is that income is taxable at one of the main rates of income tax (see table 1 for rates in and thresholds). There are alternative rates of tax for dividends that would otherwise be taxable at one of the main rates. Income tax works on a stack basis, earned income is taxed first, then savings income is taxed, and then dividend income is taxed. 4
5 Table 1: Income tax rates by type of income and tax band Source Starting rate Basic rate Higher rate Additional rate for savings A Taxable 0-2, ,865 31,865 - Over 150,000 income after allowance 150,000 Earnings B - 20% 40% 45% Savings 10% 20% 40% 45% Dividends C - 10% 32.5% 37.5% A The starting rate for savings is a special rate of tax for savings income only. It is only available to the extent that the individual s taxable income from earnings does not exceed the starting rate limit. B Includes all taxable income not defined as savings or dividend income. C Dividends are paid with a non-reclaimable 10 per cent tax credit that satisfies the tax liability for dividends taxable at the basic rate. For more information about the income tax liability of an individual see the income tax liabilities statistics bulletin. 2 Further information is also available on the HMRC website. 3 Income tax is collected by HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC). The way in which income tax is collected is dependent on the type of the income an individual has and the total income of that individual. For most individual taxpayers, income tax on employment income or occupational pensions is collected through Pay As You Earn (PAYE) where income tax is calculated and deducted from the taxpayer s pay or pension before being paid over directly to HMRC by the employer or pension provider. Tax on savings income is usually deducted at source by banks or building societies at the basic rate, with additional income tax due for higher and additional rate taxpayers being collected either through PAYE (via a change in tax code) or through Self Assessment. Taxpayers with high levels of income, the self-employed and others with income outside the scope of PAYE are required to pay any additional tax due through Self Assessment (SA). Further information about the types of income tax received by HMRC is provided in Section 2 of this publication. A repayment occurs when a taxpayer has paid too much tax to HMRC. Over payments may happen for a number of reasons, for example when people move in and out of work or receive changes to taxable benefits. Further information about tax repayments and ways of reclaiming overpaid tax is available on the HMRC website. 4 In previous years, the Child Tax Credit (CTC) and Working Tax Credit (WTC) had an income tax component of tax credits, whereby income tax credits were treated as negative tax amounts. Where the recipient of tax credits paid some tax, the amount of tax credit that served to offset all or some of the tax paid was classified as negative tax. CTC and WTC have now been re-classified as public expenditure within the National Accounts, and are therefore no longer recorded in this publication
6 1.2 What is the difference between income tax receipts and income tax liabilities statistics? In addition to the tax receipts statistics published here there is a separate publication on income tax liabilities. 5 Liabilities are amounts of tax due on incomes arising in a given tax year, whereas receipts show amounts paid and collected in a given year. Due to lags in the income tax payment regimes, particularly for Self Assessment, liabilities and receipts for the same year can differ significantly. Liabilities and receipts will also differ for other reasons, for example when over or underpayments occur which are repaid or recovered in a later year altering total receipts in that year in a way unrelated to tax liabilities for that year. Moreover the methods for producing income tax receipts and liability statistics are different (receipts statistics are based on administrative data sources whereas liability statistics are compiled using a sample of tax return data). If you require statistics about how much tax is actually paid and collected by HMRC in any given tax year, or information on how the tax has been collected, then the information you require is contained within this publication. The nature of how income tax is collected means it is not possible to analyse receipts by taxpayer characteristics, for example, by taxpayer s marginal tax rate, age or gender. However, these analyses are possible through modelling of income tax liabilities based on a representative sample of taxpayers using administrative data. If you require detailed breakdowns of income taxpayer numbers and the distribution of tax liabilities across taxpayers and tax bands, then you should look at statistics on tax liabilities. These statistics on tax liabilities also reflect more closely and directly than tax receipts the impact of changes in the tax regime and in the wider economy. Some further income tax statistics are published by HMRC, in addition to the Income Tax Receipts and Income Tax Liabilities statistics. These include: Personal Incomes statistics - tables containing summary information about individuals who are UK taxpayers, their income and the Income Tax to which they are liable (http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/statistics/tax-statistics/liabilities.pdf) Pay as you earn income tax deducted from pay by industry table containing percentage distribution of income tax deducted from pay, by industry (http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/statistics/industry.htm) 5 6
7 1.3 What information does this publication cover? This publication shows annual income tax receipts and income tax credits and repayments (other than those made through Self Assessment). Receipts are disaggregated according to the way in which tax is collected (through Pay As You Earn, Self Assessment etc). Repayments and tax credits are broken down by type. Tables in this publication currently cover the years to Figures shown for each year are consistent with HMRC s Trust Statement for that year. 1.4 Who might be interested in this publication? These tables are likely to be of interest to policy makers in government, academics, think-tanks and other research bodies and journalists. They would be of use to individuals or organisations interested in total income tax receipts, and the breakdown of receipts by method of collection. 1.5 Rounding Figures in the tables are rounded to the nearest 1 million. 1.6 Revisions strategy and revisions made in this publication With the exception of the removal of the negative income tax components of WFTC, CTC, DPTC and WTC, no changes have been made to the figures for and earlier years. Estimates for are considered final in this publication. Figures will otherwise be revised only if an error is discovered. 1.7 Questions and feedback HMRC are committed to providing impartial quality statistics that meet our users needs. We encourage our users to contact us so we can improve our statistics and identify gaps in them. If you would like to comment on these statistics or have any queries about the statistics please contact the statistician named at the start of this document. Alternatively we would welcome any views you have using the link to the feedback form below. We will undertake to review user comments on a quarterly basis and use this information to influence the development of our statistics. We will summarise and publish user comments at regular intervals. 7
8 Income Tax Receipts Statistics Tables This publication covers two tables: Table 2.8: Table 2.8: Income tax receipts: analysis by type Table 2.9: Income tax credits and repayments: analysis by type Table 2.8 gives a breakdown of net receipts of income tax by type of receipt and total repayments. The table shows: Self Assessment (SA) receipts (net of repayments): Only net SA receipts are included in this table. Self Assessment has been used to collect tax direct from individuals, trusts and estates from the tax year For each tax year a first Payment on Account (POA) is due on 31 January of that year, based on the previous year s liability. A second POA is due on 31 July and the balance of liabilities on the next 31 January (although many taxpayers do not have to make any POAs and will make a single payment at the time of the balancing payment). Net receipts in a year also include late payments in respect of earlier years and are also net of repayments made, mostly to those for whom deductions at source exceeded their total liability. Pay As You Earn (PAYE) receipts: These figures include all receipts of tax collected from employers or pension schemes under PAYE. They include some payments of tax on investment income or in respect of income from previous years coded out under PAYE, these amounts are not separately distinguished. PAYE receipts also include deductions from sub-contractors made under the Construction Industry Scheme (CIS). Assessed income tax receipts: Tax under this heading relates to legacy HMRC systems. 6 Tax Deduction Scheme for Interest (TDSI) receipts: Banks and building societies deduct tax at a rate of 20% from interest paid on accounts held with them unless the investor is not liable to pay tax and has registered to receive interest gross. They must also deduct income tax from their annual payments, such as interest on bonds and debentures. They then pay the income tax deducted to HMRC. Account holders not liable to income tax who have not registered, and those who have had more tax deducted than they are due to pay, can claim a repayment from HMRC of the excess tax deducted. These repayments are included in the repayments total. 6 Schedules A (Tax on owner-occupied properties), B (income derived from the occupation of commercial woodlands), D (succeeded by Self Assessment) and E (succeeded by PAYE), and additional tax on investment income collected following the issue of a formal assessment (this arose if a taxpayer liable at the higher rate received dividends paid with a tax credit or other investment income where tax at the lower rate has been deducted at source, and the additional tax due is not collected via PAYE). These Schedules no longer exist but small amounts of money are still being received in respect of liabilities that arose prior to their abolition. 8
9 Other tax deducted at source: This covers all tax deducted at source other than under PAYE and TDSI. There are two main types; (1) interest on securities paid by the Bank of England or other paying agents, who pay the tax direct to HMRC (recipients of the interest are credited with the tax deducted), (2) income tax payments equivalent to TDSI but made by companies other than banks. Other receipts: This includes receipts from investigation settlements and income tax payments which could not be allocated to a particular category. Also included are overpayments which may relate to any head of tax (unallocated receipts). Most of these overpayments are repaid during the year and recorded in repayment figures within this table. From onwards other receipts category also captures amounts recovered from taxpayers following the end of year reconciliation of tax years and that have been recovered by means other than adjustments to the tax code and amounts collected through the Accounting for Tax scheme. Repayments (other than Self Assessment): Total of repayments and income tax credits recorded in table 2.9. Total net receipts: The sum of the above. Table 2.9: Table 2.9 shows a breakdown of income tax repayments by type: Mortgage interest relief as source (MIRAS): Relief on mortgage interest repayments was removed from 6 April Mortgage interest relief for those aged 65 and over who take out loans to buy a life annuity (a home income plan) ended with effect from 9 March 1999, but existing loans will continue to qualify for the remainder of the loan period. Under MIRAS borrowers paid their interest after deducting their tax relief. HMRC reimbursed lenders for the amounts deducted. Amounts are exclusive of public expenditure. Life assurance premium relief at source (LAPRAS): LAPRAS operates in a similar way to MIRAS so that premiums are paid to life assurance companies net of tax relief, and HMRC reimburses the insurers for the amounts deducted. The relief applies only to policies taken out before 14 March Up to 5 April 1989 relief was 15% of the premium and it is now 12.5%. Amounts are exclusive of public expenditure. Other tax credits: Other reliefs given at a fixed rate which include relief on private medical insurance (PMI) premiums for the over 60s (abolished in the July 1999 Budget), and basic rate relief on vocational training (from April 1999 to September 2000 when it was abolished). Amounts shown are exclusive of public expenditure. 9
10 Repayments to individuals: Include repayments of all types of income tax overpaid by taxpayers other than repayments made via Self Assessment (for which receipts figures in table 2.8 are net of repayments). They also include repayments of tax deducted from interest or other annual payments or payments of dividend tax credits to non-taxpayers. These figures have not been available since as the method used to calculate them has become unreliable. Repayments to individuals, pension funds and insurance companies, and overseas repayments are based on a sample survey of repayment authorisations. The authorisation forms are not returned for all repayment cases, and the rate of return has been in decline. Substantial scaling factors were required in to scale the available returns up to total repayments. This lead to doubts over the representativeness of the survey and doubts over the accuracy of results from it. For this reason the series was discontinued from Personal pension contribution repayments: Payments made to pension scheme administrators for basic rate tax relief on employees contributions to personal pensions and freestanding additional voluntary contributions. Tax relief on the national insurance rebate relating to employee s contributions is included. The public expenditure component is excluded. Pension funds in insurance companies repayments: Mainly payments of dividend tax credits and repayments of tax deducted from interest or other annual payments to pension funds and to life assurance companies in respect of their pension business which is also exempt from tax. They also include payments for relief on private medical insurance (PMI) premiums for the over 60s and any other repayments made to insurance companies. Repayments made during and after were much lower than in previous years because of the Budget 1997 measure which abolished the payment of dividend tax credits to pension schemes and UK companies for dividends paid on or after 2 July These figures have not been available since as the method used to calculate them has become unreliable. Repayments to charities: These figures are exclusive of public expenditure. Overseas repayments: All repayments of tax and payments of dividend tax credits made by HMRC to non-residents. They exclude tax credits given at source by companies paying the dividends. These figures have not been available since as the method used to calculate them has become unreliable. Personal Equity Plans and Individual Savings Accounts repayments: These are payments of tax credits associated with dividend income and repayments of tax deducted from other investment income which are made to personal equity plan managers and from individual savings account managers. 10
11 Other repayments: This category mainly consists of repayments to UK resident companies other than insurance companies. It includes the repayment of some overpayments which relate to heads of tax other than income tax. These figures have not been available since Income tax repayments are made for a large variety of reasons and go to many types of recipients. Some are made for a specific purpose to a particular type of recipient, such as MIRAS repayments to mortgage lenders, and these repayments are usually readily identifiable in departmental accounting systems. However in most other cases the reason for the repayment cannot be determined from the information held in these systems and it is not always possible to identify the nature of the recipient, especially for some of the smaller repayments. As a result the allocation between the individuals, pension funds and insurance companies, overseas and other categories used in the table is based in part on the results of a sample of these repayments. The resulting estimates for these categories are rounded. The main reasons for the repayments in these categories and in those for charities and personal equity plans are that the recipients are entitled to a payment of the tax credit associated with their dividend income, or a repayment of tax deducted at source on their other investment income. Payments of dividend tax credits are accounted for in the same way as income tax repayments and cannot be separately distinguished. All figures shown relate to the negative tax component only. Repayments and payments of tax credits are treated as the negative income tax component only. Repayments and payments of tax credits are treated as negative income tax to the extent that they are less than or equal to the total tax liability of the recipient. Any part of the payment that is not negative tax is treated as public expenditure. All figures shown are net of the payments made from the Exchequer to reimburse Inland Revenue for the public expenditure components of MIRAS, LAPRAS, PMI and VTR credits, as well as repayments to personal pension scheme administrators and charities. 11
12 3. Statistical Commentary 3.1 Summary of key statistics Total net income tax receipts in are estimated to be billion, whilst income tax repayments in are estimated at 5.6 billion. Net income tax receipts in are 4.0% higher than in Latest figures available The latest year for which figures are available is figures in this publication are consistent with the HMRC Trust Statement and are considered final. Total net receipts in were billion, 14.5% of which, 23.6 billion, was from Self Assessment. Gross receipts (other than Self Assessment) were billion. Of this, billion (96.2%) was PAYE receipts, and 1.8 billion (1.2%), was TDSI receipts. Total repayments and tax credits, other than Self Assessment, were 5.6 billion in , of which almost the entire amount consisted of repayments. 2.4 billion were repayments to individuals, 1.5 billion were repayment of personal pension contributions and 1.2 billion were repayments to charities. 3.3 Overall trends in time series Chart 1: total net receipts Chart 1 shows total net income tax receipts from to Total net receipts have increased between and by 4.0% (up from 3.2% from to ) and are now at their highest ever level, recovering from a sharp dip in The overall increase since is 7.5%. The increase in is mainly due to the increase in PAYE receipts. 12
13 Between and net income tax receipts fell by 1.7% (or 2.6 billion) largely due to lower receipts of Self Assessment income tax. The lag in the Self Assessment payment regime means that receipts in and relate largely to liabilities for and respectively. The introduction of the 50% additional rate of income tax in had a major effect on the behaviour of taxpayers with incomes above the additional rate threshold of 150,000 with large amounts of income forestalling, i.e. income brought forward into from later years in order to be taxed at 40% before the 50% rate came into effect. Self Assessment income tax liabilities were therefore inflated in and depressed in as the effects of forestalling started to unwind. This then boosted receipts in and depressed them in Self Assessment income tax receipts increased by 1.5% in and 13.4% in , and are now above their level by 1.1bn. Between and total net receipts fell by 5.6%. Self Assessment receipts in were lower than receipts in , a decrease of 4% (the lag in Self Assessment means that receipts in relate largely to liabilities). Lower receipts can be attributed to a downturn in the economy in and through Chart 2: gross receipts other than Self Assessment Chart 2 shows the breakdown of gross receipts, excluding Self Assessment receipts. There was an increase of 2.3% in total gross receipts between and , of nearly 3.3 billion. This increase is mainly due to an increase in other receipts and PAYE income tax receipts. The chart shows a fall of 6% between and , whilst gross receipts increased by 1% between and This comprised an increase of 3% in PAYE receipts offset by decreases in TDSI (60%) and other tax deducted at source (9%). 13
14 Chart 3: income tax credits Chart 3 shows income tax credits. In contrast to previous versions of this publication, this chart no longer shows the receipts derived from the income tax components of CTC, WTFC, WTC and DPTC as these have now been classified as public expenditure. MIRAS receipts fell after the relief was removed at the end of Very small amounts have been received in subsequent years. LAPRAS receipts have steadily decreased over the period, with approximately 7m in receipts received in
15 Chart 4: Repayments (other than Self Assessment) Chart 4 shows total non-self Assessment repayments. Repayments dipped in due to delays to the PAYE end of year reconciliation for linked to the introduction of a new PAYE administrative system (the National Insurance and PAYE Service, or NPS). Repayments then rose sharply in and , reflecting the catch up from the initial NPS delays, the further speeding up of the end of year reconciliation process, and the greater accuracy of this process bringing more overpayments to light and therefore generating more repayments. The figures for and also reflect the clearance of a longstanding backlog of cases for tax years before
16 Table Income tax receipts: analysis by type to Amounts: million Receipts other than self assessment 107, , , , , ,771 of which: PAYE 101, , , , , ,470 Assessed income tax Tax deduction scheme for interest (TDSI) 2,092 2,266 2,969 3,124 4,134 4,365 Other tax deducted at source 1,081 1,188 1,400 1,744 1,564 1,615 Other receipts 2,637 2,645 3,416 3,290 2,603 2,122 Self Assessment, net of repayments 1 15,772 17,141 18,077 20,306 22,443 22,531 Repayments other than self assessment 2,3,5-5,237-4,840-5,013-5,706-5,974-5,861 Total net receipts 4 117, , , , , ,441 million Receipts other than self assessment 128, , , , , ,036 of which: PAYE 122, , , , , ,506 Assessed income tax Tax deduction scheme for interest (TDSI) 2,676 1,994 1,763 1,860 1,879 1,755 Other tax deducted at source 1,190 1,003 1,463 1,504 1,579 1,223 Other receipts 1,554 2,460 2,215 2,579 3,515 2,399 Self Assessment, net of repayments 1 21,708 22,108 20,334 20,550 20,854 23,645 Repayments other than self assessment 2,3,5-4,961-6,417-7,084-6,965-5,702-5,572 Total net receipts 4 144, , , , , ,109 1 Income tax element only (see notes) 2 Including payments of tax credits 3 Exclusive of Public Expenditure (see notes) 4 Totals may not equal the sum of their components because of rounding 5 From , there is no tax component of tax credits, as these have been reclassified as public expenditure 16
17 Table Income tax credits and repayments 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 : analysis by type to Amounts: million Income tax credits of which: MIRAS LAPRAS Other Repayments 5,174 4,797 4,970 5,673 5,947 5,844 of which: Individuals 1,650 1,700 1,800 2,250 2,250 2,100 Personal pension contributions 1,793 1,760 1,706 1,949 2,263 2,206 Pension funds and insurance companies Charities Overseas Personal Equity Plans/Individual Savings Accounts Other Total tax credits and repayments 5,237 4,840 5,013 5,706 5,974 5,861 million Income tax credits of which: MIRAS LAPRAS Other Repayments 4,945 6,407 7,076 6,957 5,695 5,565 of which: Individuals 1,500 3,050 3,900 3,550 2,700 2,400 Personal pension contributions 1,877 1,679 1,615 1,805 1,506 1,512 Pension funds and insurance companies Charities ,027 1,049 1,060 1,200 Overseas Personal Equity Plans/Individual Savings Accounts Other Total tax credits and repayments 4,961 6,417 7,084 6,965 5,702 5,572 1 Including payments of tax credits 2 Excluding repayments made via Self Assessment system 3 Totals may not equal the sum of their components because of rounding 4 Exclusive of Public Expenditure 5 The estimates for these categories have become unreliable and so are not shown separately 17
18 Annex A: Data sources, methodology and data quality Data used in the income tax receipts tables comes from HMRC departmental administrative sources. PAYE receipts come from the BROCS system (Business Review of the Collection Service) for all years up to and including From PAYE receipts come from a different PAYE accounting system (the Enterprise Tax Management Platform, or ETMP), linked to the Real Time Information (RTI) programme. Self Assessment receipts come from the HMRC system SAMAS (Self Assessment Management Accounting System). 8 Other components come from the HMRC system SAFE (Strategic Accounting Framework Environment). 9 Data is extracted from the relevant systems. Some adjustments are applied to data extracted from the systems in order to identify the income tax component: PAYE: receipts for PAYE IT and NIC1 are collected through the same system and are not separately identifiable at the time of receipt. HMRC do not know the split between IT and NICs until the employer s end of year return (P35) is received, around May following the end of the tax year. Receipts are provisionally split during the tax year (using HMRC forecasting models) and compensating adjustments are made once the P35 is received. Thus receipts in a financial year cover amounts accounted for under income tax during the year, and reallocations between income tax and NICs received in previous years. Self Assessment: receipts include income tax, capital gains tax and Class 4 NICs. Money paid via Self Assessment covers income tax, capital gains tax and Class 4 NICs. Receipts for each of these heads of duty are not identified separately, instead they are apportioned based on the split of liabilities. This split of receipts is fixed for the Trust Statement. Preliminary estimates for the latest year are published in April. These are based on the estimated end year receipts position, with forecasted values being used where final receipts positions are unknown, where values are not final this will be indicated in the statistical tables. The HMRC Trust Statement is published during July. Receipts for the latest year are aligned to the Trust Statement and published as final receipts during the summer. Statistics are based on data from major HMRC administrative systems plus data published in the Trust Statement, which are subject to high levels of scrutiny and audit. The data sources used to produce the income tax receipts statistics are also used to monitor tax receipts and they are used to produce other published HMRC statistics (HM Revenue and Customs receipts) The main purpose of BROCS is to: maintain accounting records; issue reminders for late payment and collate information about debts for PAYE, Class 1 and 1A NICs, surcharges and related interest; and enable the total amounts remitted to HMRC under each PAYE scheme over the course of the year to be reconciled with the total which the employer indicates on their (P35) end of year return that they believe they have remitted. 8 SAMAS is the management accounting system used to agree the credits and debits posted to the SA system.. 9 SAFE is HMRC s accounting framework
Scottish rate of income tax From 6 April 2016, different rates of income tax may apply in Scotland. Under Scotland Act 2012, UK income tax rates will not apply to Scotland. Instead, the UK element of income