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Legal

PP 2010/160

The Finance Act 2003 requires taxpayers to ensure that stamp duty land tax (SDLT) returns are filed on time. Taxpayers who submit late returns render themselves liable to pay fixed penalties in addition to interest on any tax that is overdue. The amount of the penalty depends on the lateness of the return. Those made within three months of the filing date attract a fixed penalty of £100. The penalty doubles if returns are later than this, and if a return is not filed within 12 months, taxpayers will have to pay a tax-based penalty (which can be up to the full amount of the tax due on the return).

HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) may agree to waive the penalty if the taxpayer can provide a “reasonable excuse” for the late submission.  Ignorance of the requirement to submit a return is not a reasonable excuse and the fact that neither the landlord’s solicitor nor HMRC had made a taxpayer aware of his legal obligations did not excuse his failure to submit a return in Ryan v Commissioners for HM Revenue & Customs [2010] UKFTT 309 (TC).

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