HMRC Tax Investigation Specialist Cambridge • Compliance Checks • Tax Enquiry Support
HMRC Tax Investigation Specialist Cambridge
HMRC Tax Investigation Specialist Cambridge support is available for individuals, landlords, directors, sole traders, companies and internationally mobile taxpayers who need a careful response to HMRC enquiries, compliance checks and tax investigation letters. We review the HMRC letter, identify the tax years and records involved, prepare the response, manage disclosure issues and help deal with tax, interest and penalties in a controlled way.
HMRC tax enquiry advice for Cambridge clients
HMRC Tax Investigation Specialist Cambridge for Compliance Checks and Tax Enquiries
Different names for HMRC checks
HMRC may describe a tax investigation as a compliance check, enquiry, aspect enquiry, VAT inspection, PAYE review, property income check, Self Assessment enquiry, Corporation Tax review or business records check. The title used in the letter matters because it helps identify HMRC’s powers, the period under review and the response needed.
Why the HMRC wording matters
HMRC’s guidance on compliance checks explains that HMRC can check whether the right tax has been paid at the right time and whether the right allowances and reliefs have been claimed. The response should therefore be based on the letter, records and risk, not on assumptions.
Ask us to review your HMRC letterCommon reasons Cambridge clients contact us
- You received an HMRC compliance check or enquiry letter.
- HMRC is asking for bank statements, invoices, rent schedules or business records.
- HMRC has queried rental income, expenses, property ownership or capital gains.
- You have foreign income, offshore accounts or overseas property that needs review.
- You are a director, consultant, contractor or founder with company tax issues.
- HMRC has raised penalties, interest, discovery assessments or estimated tax.
- You disagree with HMRC’s figures, assumptions or information request.
- You are worried the enquiry may widen into earlier years.
HMRC investigation services
HMRC Tax Investigation Services for Enquiries, Disclosures and Penalties
We support Cambridge clients at different stages of an HMRC investigation, from the first letter through to disclosure, response drafting, penalty mitigation, settlement and closure. The aim is to keep the enquiry controlled, evidence-led and focused on the correct tax position.
HMRC Tax Investigation Specialist Cambridge
Support is available where HMRC has opened a compliance check into your tax return, business records, rental income, VAT, PAYE, Corporation Tax or foreign income position.
- Review of HMRC’s letter and statutory deadline
- Identification of documents and evidence required
- Response drafting and HMRC correspondence
- Penalty and settlement risk review
Self Assessment Tax Investigation
Support is available where HMRC is checking personal tax returns, employment income, self-employment, dividends, interest, pensions, gains, omitted income or relief claims. We also review whether earlier years may be affected.
- Tax return and calculation review
- Income, expense and relief checks
- HMRC questions and document response
- Penalty and disclosure advice
Rental Income and Landlord Tax Investigation
Support is available where HMRC is checking undeclared rental income, joint property ownership, HMO or student letting records, mortgage interest, property expenses or earlier landlord tax returns.
- Rental income and expense reconstruction
- Joint ownership and property split review
- Earlier-year disclosure support
- HMRC property income response
VAT Investigation and VAT Inspection Support
Support is available where HMRC is reviewing VAT returns, input VAT claims, sales records, VAT registration, late VAT returns, Making Tax Digital records or VAT errors. Therefore, VAT records should be reconciled before replying.
- VAT records and return review
- VAT error correction advice
- HMRC VAT information response
- Penalty and interest risk review
Corporation Tax Investigation Support
Support is available where HMRC is checking company accounts, CT600 returns, director costs, loans, dividends, disallowable expenses, losses or Corporation Tax payments.
- CT600 and accounts review
- Director loan and dividend checks
- Tax computation review
- HMRC response and settlement support
Foreign Income and Offshore Disclosure Support
Support is available where HMRC is asking about foreign income, overseas bank accounts, overseas property, foreign pensions, double tax relief, offshore funds or undeclared foreign income. The correct disclosure route should be reviewed before figures are submitted.
- Foreign income and SA106 review
- Earlier-year offshore income calculations
- Worldwide Disclosure Facility route review
- HMRC foreign income response
Clear answer
What Should You Do After Receiving an HMRC Investigation Letter?
HMRC Tax Investigation Specialist Cambridge review: scope and deadline
After receiving an HMRC investigation or compliance check letter, read it carefully, note the deadline, identify the tax years and taxes being checked, and review the information HMRC has requested before responding.
Do not send a rushed response
Do not send a rushed response before checking whether HMRC’s request is informal, formal or linked to possible penalties. Instead, review the records and risk first so the response is accurate, proportionate and properly explained.
An HMRC investigation review normally checks
- Which tax, period or return HMRC is checking.
- The response deadline and any formal notice.
- Whether HMRC is using statutory powers.
- What documents are relevant to the enquiry.
- Whether the figures submitted were correct.
- Whether earlier years may be affected.
- Potential tax, interest and penalty exposure.
- Whether disclosure or appeal action is needed.
HMRC deadline • penalty risk • controlled response
Do Not Ignore HMRC Investigation Letters or Information Notices
Deadlines and incomplete replies
HMRC letters often include strict response dates. Missing a deadline or sending incomplete information can increase risk, especially where HMRC believes tax has been understated.
Formal powers and information notices
HMRC’s guidance on information notices explains that a formal notice can require a person to provide information and produce documents. Before replying, establish whether HMRC is asking informally, using formal powers, raising assessments or considering penalties.
Understand exactly which tax, period, return, income source or issue HMRC is checking.
Provide documents that answer the question without creating confusion or unnecessary risk.
Penalty exposure may depend on whether HMRC views the issue as reasonable care, careless or deliberate.
The quality of telling, helping and giving records may affect penalty mitigation.
HMRC powers, penalties and disclosure
How Penalties Are Affected by Behaviour and Disclosure Quality
Behaviour and disclosure category
HMRC penalty exposure can depend on the tax involved, whether there was an inaccuracy or failure to notify, whether the disclosure was prompted or unprompted, the behaviour involved and the quality of disclosure.
Why a prepared response matters
HMRC’s factsheet on penalties for inaccuracies explains that penalties may be charged where an inaccurate return or document has been sent. Consequently, a properly prepared response can be important for both the tax figure and penalty mitigation.
Common penalty and disclosure issues
- Careless errors in returns or documents.
- Omitted income or unsupported expense claims.
- Failure to notify HMRC of a taxable source.
- Late response to a formal information notice.
- Weak disclosure or incomplete explanation.
- Not correcting known issues before HMRC finds them.
Specialist HMRC investigation support
Why Use a Specialist Tax Accountant for HMRC Investigations?
Technical tax and evidence review
HMRC investigations require more than sending documents. The response needs to deal with the technical tax position, evidence, explanation, penalty behaviour, disclosure quality and settlement strategy.
Keeping the enquiry controlled
A weak response can widen the enquiry, invite further questions or make penalties harder to reduce. Therefore, a structured response should answer HMRC’s questions, provide relevant evidence and keep the enquiry focused on the correct scope.
We help you avoid common investigation mistakes
- Replying before understanding HMRC’s powers and enquiry scope.
- Sending too much information without explanation.
- Ignoring penalties, interest or earlier-year exposure.
- Failing to correct known errors before HMRC finds them.
- Accepting HMRC assumptions without reviewing evidence.
- Missing appeal, review or disclosure opportunities.
Our HMRC investigation process
A Clear Process from HMRC Letter to Response and Settlement
We keep the investigation process controlled so you understand what HMRC is asking, what evidence is needed and how the matter can be moved towards resolution. As a result, each response is prepared with the tax position, evidence and penalty risk in mind.
Review HMRC letter
First, we review the letter, tax years, deadline, information requested and possible enquiry powers.
Assess records and risk
Next, we identify the tax issue, records required, errors, omissions and possible penalty exposure.
Prepare response
After that, we prepare a structured response with explanations, evidence and disclosure points where needed.
Move towards closure
Finally, we support HMRC correspondence, tax calculations, penalty mitigation and settlement discussions.
Documents checklist
What We May Need to Review Your HMRC Investigation
The documents required depend on the type of investigation. Therefore, we send a tailored checklist after reviewing the HMRC letter. However, these items are often useful for the initial review.
HMRC correspondence
Compliance check letter, information notice, penalty notice, discovery assessment, tax calculation or enquiry opening letter.
Tax returns and records
Submitted tax returns, accounts, VAT returns, payroll records, property schedules and supporting calculations.
Evidence and statements
Bank statements, invoices, receipts, rental statements, contracts, bookkeeping reports and foreign income records.
Background facts
Timeline of events, explanation of errors, previous accountant details, HMRC deadlines and any previous disclosures.
Cambridge and online HMRC investigation support
HMRC Tax Investigation Specialist Cambridge and Cambridgeshire
Cambridge-based tax investigation support
We support clients in Cambridge city centre, Chesterton, Trumpington, Cherry Hinton, Newnham, Milton, Histon, Girton, Grantchester and surrounding Cambridgeshire areas.
Online support for wider UK tax investigations
Most HMRC investigation work can be handled online by phone, email, secure upload and video call. This is often practical where the matter involves records, tax returns, bank statements, rental schedules, company accounts or foreign income documents.
HMRC deadline • penalty risk • controlled response
Get an Initial Review of Your HMRC Investigation Letter
Use the form to tell us what HMRC has sent, the deadline, tax years involved and the issue being checked. If the deadline is urgent, book an appointment or contact us directly before responding to HMRC.
Common questions
HMRC Tax Investigation Cambridge FAQs
What should I do if I receive an HMRC compliance check letter?
You should read the letter carefully, note the deadline and avoid sending a rushed reply. HMRC may be asking for specific information or documents. A professional review helps identify the scope of the check, the records needed and whether there are wider tax or penalty risks.
Is an HMRC compliance check the same as a tax investigation?
Many clients use the phrase tax investigation to describe an HMRC compliance check, enquiry or review. However, the formal wording in the HMRC letter matters because it can affect HMRC’s powers, the period under review and how you should respond.
Can HMRC ask for bank statements?
HMRC may ask for documents and information during a compliance check. Whether bank statements are appropriate depends on the scope of the enquiry and the reason for the request. Therefore, the response should be proportionate and properly explained.
Can you deal with HMRC on my behalf?
Yes. Once appointed, we can review HMRC’s questions, prepare responses, communicate with HMRC, review calculations and help manage the enquiry through to settlement or closure.
Will I have to pay penalties after an HMRC investigation?
Penalty exposure depends on the facts. HMRC considers the type of error, behaviour, whether the disclosure was prompted or unprompted and the quality of disclosure. Therefore, some cases may involve no penalty, while others can involve significant penalties and interest.
Can you help if I have undeclared income?
Yes. If income has not been declared, we can review the years involved, calculate the tax position and advise on the appropriate disclosure route. It is usually better to address known errors carefully rather than waiting for HMRC to discover them.
Can you help with HMRC penalties or appeals?
Yes. We can review penalties, reasonable excuse arguments, behaviour classification, disclosure quality, penalty suspension possibilities and appeal or review routes where appropriate.
Can I get an instant quote for HMRC investigation support?
You can request an initial quote, but HMRC investigation work often needs a review of the HMRC letter, deadline, tax years and issues involved before a final fee can be confirmed. Consequently, complex investigations may require staged fees.
Investigation quote or urgent appointment
Speak to an HMRC Tax Investigation Specialist
Send your details if HMRC has opened an enquiry, issued an information request, raised a penalty, asked for records or questioned a tax return, VAT return, payroll record, rental income schedule, foreign income position or Company Tax Return. Then, we will confirm the next practical step.