HMRC targets Avon reps and Ann Summers party hosts for unpaid tax

The taxman is taking on various groups of direct sellers in a bid to reclaim unpaid tax.
When she was at University, my wife used to be an Avon representative. Every weekend she’d spend a couple of hours trawling around her neighbourhood, keeping the residents supplied with all manner of eyeliner, mascara, nail varnish and the like.
It wasn’t exactly a big earner, but just a few pounds to help cover the costs of her studies. However, it’s sales reps like my wife that the taxman is now targeting, with HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) suggesting the ‘direct selling’ industry is one area of the economy likely to have a high number of missing tax returns.
It’s not just Avon reps of course. Those who hold Ann Summers or ‘Jamie at Home’ parties will also be under scrutiny – anyone who earns money from selling goods direct to others, or the commission from those sales, will be under the taxman’s watchful gaze.
HMRC isn’t limiting itself to direct sellers either. It’s also launched a campaign cracking down on home improvement traders: roofers, window fitters, bricklayers, carpenters and joiners. This follows similar campaigns aimed at plumbers and electricians.
And finally, HMRC is targeting a third strand – those taxpayers who have failed to complete tax returns and are liable to pay tax at the highest rates.
Getting your tax return in
It’s the people who have not filed their tax returns that HMRC is targeting first.
The deadline for self-assessment tax returns passed at the beginning of the month, so if you still haven’t filed yours, you are in line for at least a £100 fine, irrespective of whether you actually owe any tax or not.
For a guide to what you will have to pay, and the reasons HMRC will accept for late returns, check out What to do if you haven’t filed your tax return yet.
How the taxman is cracking down
HMRC has made sure it's emphasising that it will be utilising technology in its attempts to nab anyone not paying their full tax liabilities.
But what does that actually mean?
Well, mainly it means making use of the internet. The taxman will be searching the web for information about specified, targeted people and businesses. That information will then be cross-referenced with returns sent to HMRC.
If HMRC decides that something is amiss, you can then expect a visit from the taxman.
Admitting your mistakes
If you have made money from direct selling or home improvement trading and haven’t paid the right amount of tax, don’t panic – you can at least limit the damage. In the words of HMRC, if you come forward you will be given the “chance to put [your] affairs in order on the best possible terms”.
That basically means that the penalties you will face for any errors in the past will be a lot smaller if you admit them yourself, rather than waiting for a knock on the door from the inspectors at Revenue & Customs.
Indeed, if you do keep quiet there’s the possibility that you may end up facing a criminal investigation.
Since the campaign aimed at plumbers was launched, nearly 600 people have come forward to notify HMRC of their intention to declare unpaid tax worth more than £4 million. Ten plumbers have been arrested, with more than 1,000 civil cases prepared.
If you want to come forward and voluntarily disclose, call 0845 601 5041.
More campaigns to come
The taxman isn’t finished though. There are two more campaigns to be launched before the end of the tax year.
The first will be targeting e-marketplaces – those who use sites like eBay to buy and sell goods as a trade or business, but don’t pay the tax owed. HMRC made sure to point out that those who only sell a few items here and there and are not traders are unlikely to be targeted.
The second campaign will be focused on electricians. The success of the plumbers campaign has convinced HMRC to focus on a specific group of tradespeople again.
A targeted approach
HMRC has enjoyed some success with this targeted approach thus far, picking out specific areas of the economy where tax revenues are believed to be slipping through their fingers.
Inevitably though, there will be some criticism that the sums recovered are relatively small. The £4 million from plumbers, for example, is small change in the grand scheme of things, particularly when HMRC is accused of a ‘cosy’ relationship with big businesses, such as the deal with Vodafone which saw the mobile network’s tax bill of around £7 billion waived.
What do you think? Is HMRC right to conduct these small, targeted campaigns at individuals? Let us know your views via the comment box below!
More: How to pay less tax | How to call 0845 and 0870 numbers for free
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It's about time that HMRC investigated car-boot sale traders as well as those on e-Bay.
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Ahh ok, so you think HMRC has limited intellect but not the people who run the organisation? Then I apologise for misunderstanding your misleading grammar. Your first sentence is ambiguous since you refer to "HMRC" it wasnt clear whether you were referring to the organisation or the people. Your next sentence is "they go after the little people". Since the organisation is singular and inanimate, (it, not they) This sentence refers to the people not the organisation. Your last point in that paragraph is "they do grubby deals", clearly again referring to the staff. I don't think it's a leap of logic for your readers to conclude that you referred to the staff having limited intellect. I made all the points I wanted to make in my original post. The key one being that everyone should be pursued for their tax and I disagree with your implied point that tax evasion by people earning £10-15k is OK. I only made my second post because I thought your tone against Ferdyg was unnecessary. I'd be interested to run a poll here to find out how common usage of the phrase "flat track bully" is. I'd never heard it but I don't think your logic or tone that I may therefore not have heard of Google is neccessary. For those that also don't know the phrase, I Googled it. The top hit on Google was Dictionary-reference.com which tells me that it is a noun meaning "A sportsperson who dominates inferior opposition but cannot beat top level opponents" I assume one usage could be to describe someone with limited talent and a misplaced sense of superiority. How appropriate..
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Give me strength...yocoxy the subject is HMRC. It is written in the previous sentence as you included it, that's your clue. Let me help you - remove the full stop at the end of the previous sentence, add "a" and you get: "Sums up everything that is wrong with the unfit for purpose HMRC, a toxic combination of large power and limited intellect". It was written about the institution - doh! It is not difficult to understand or so I thought. Just like ferdyg you also try to twist words and meanings as evidenced in your first posting. Pretty objectionable really when you misrepresent others. As to "flat track bully" you must live in a shell if you don't know what it is. You can always try Google. You have heard of that I assume. The first return will be dictionary.com. Jeepers. The case for HMRC incompetence is clear and made - I notice you and ferdyg choose to focus on the minutiae and the real substance flies over your heads it seems. Pedants...
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09 April 2012