Offshore corporates owning UK property: HMRC letter campaign
HMRC have reviewed data, including from the Land Registry, and have identified non-resident corporate owners of UK property that may not have met certain UK tax obligations.
HMRC have reviewed data, including from the Land Registry, and have identified non-resident corporate owners of UK property that may not have met certain UK tax obligations.
In October, ATT, CIOT and LITRG met with HMRC as part of our ongoing engagement on the UK Property Reporting Service.
The consultation is aimed at all those with an interest in the resolution of civil disputes in England and Wales.
HMRC are consulting on how to join up business rates data (held by the 309 billing authorities in England) with centrally held HMRC tax data to better target business rates policy and compliance, a
LITRG’s submission to the Treasury Committee’s call for evidence into the cryptoasset industry draws on HMRC’s recently commissioned research (see tinyurl.com/
HMRC’s self-declared ambition is for the UK to become one of the most digitally advanced tax administrations in the world.
Each year, the House of Commons Public Accounts Committee (PAC) holds a short inquiry into HMRC’s Annual Report and Accounts (tinyurl.com/HMRC22), consisting
The Office of Tax Simplification published its review of simplification (see bit.ly/3AIpTwW) on 18 July – just before Parliament rose for the summer recess.
The tax gap is the estimated difference between the amount of tax that should in theory be paid to HMRC and what is actually paid.
Further to our article in July’s Tax Adviser ‘UK Property Reporting Service: ongoing issues’, the ATT and CIOT have received some answers from HMRC to concerns raised at the start of this