Brockend;322962 wrote:Newbie;322891 wrote:At age 75 - just tell to keep as she is.
If HMRC want any monies they can come to her - then she can pay them !
She has no knowingly defrauded them and by the sounds of it is a genuine case of she did not know.
If she feels the urge spend it or visit a bullion dealer and buy some CGT free bullion and get it stored somewhere safe.
The bank will report the interest to HMRC, as they do now every year and they will collect the outstanding tax via her tax code, assuming she has some PAYE income
If she completes or should be completing a SA100 form details still needs to be added
I am not saying avoid paying the tax.
My point is - if HMRC want the monies they can work for it.
The amount of elderly people who I know pay an accountant to fill in a return paying them circa £250-500 pounds to determine and pay a tax bill of £100 is IMO daylight robbery.
It is the vulnerable and easy target (ie those who actually do a return) that the likes of HMRC go after and threaten.
Sure every now and then you hear about some case but they are few and far between and used to supposedly frighten non compliant people - instead they frighten the compliant and vulnerable ones.
I don;t get to hear about many taxi drivers, hair salon owners, phone repair shop owners or tradespeople and hmrc.