A penalty notice is stressful. The instinct is to explain yourself and hope HMRC understands. But understanding and accepting are two very different things. This episode cuts through the confusion — what HMRC actually accepts as a reasonable excuse, what gets rejected outright, and the five steps that give your appeal the best chance of success.
What You’ll Learn in This Episode
- What “reasonable excuse” means in practice and how HMRC tests it
- The circumstances HMRC will typically accept, backed by evidence
- The excuses that fail every time, however understandable they feel
- A clear five-step process for building a credible penalty appeal
- Why good tax planning remains the strongest protection of all
Introduction
Missing a tax deadline happens. Life gets congested. A penalty notice appears and your first instinct is to reach for an explanation. The trouble is HMRC operates on rules and their interpretation of them, not on sympathy. Knowing what qualifies before you put a single word in writing is what separates a successful appeal from an expensive lesson in tax for small businesses.
What Is a Reasonable Excuse?
There is no legal definition of reasonable excuse anywhere in UK tax legislation. Parliament never wrote one. Instead, HMRC applies a sensible person test: would a reasonable, responsible person in the same circumstances have still missed the deadline?
The bar is higher than most expect. HMRC assumes you understand your obligations and are capable of meeting them. A reasonable excuse is not a general explanation of a difficult period. It is a specific set of circumstances that made compliance genuinely impossible, not merely inconvenient.
What HMRC Will Usually Accept
HMRC publishes scenarios they typically accept, provided you can back them up with evidence. These are the circumstances that carry real weight in an appeal.
Bereavement
If a close relative or partner passes away shortly before the deadline, HMRC acknowledges that grief and funeral planning take priority. Timing matters, as does the closeness of the relationship to the person responsible for filing.
Unplanned hospital stay
Being admitted to hospital unexpectedly and being unable to manage your affairs can qualify. Be prepared for HMRC to ask whether you could have delegated the task to someone else in the meantime.
Serious illness
Life-threatening or severely debilitating conditions are considered, but timing and impact are both scrutinised. A minor illness that happened to coincide with a deadline is unlikely to succeed on its own.
Unexpected technology failure
If your device failed without warning at the point of submission, and the failure was genuinely outside your control, you may have a case. The key word is unexpected — an ageing laptop that had been struggling for weeks is a different matter.
Natural disaster or postal strike
Fires, floods, and postal strikes affecting delivery of relevant documents can all support a reasonable excuse. Physical evidence, including dates, photographs, and correspondence, will strengthen the claim considerably. If your records ended up under three feet of water, that is a strong position to argue from — provided you can evidence it.
What HMRC Will Reject
Some reasons are effectively dead on arrival. Submitting them wastes time and leaves the penalty in place.
Not having the money to pay is one of the most common and least successful arguments. HMRC treats this as a failure of business tax planning UK, not an unavoidable event. Finding the online system confusing or difficult to use carries no weight either. The expectation is that you seek help or hire an expert if needed.
Forgetting the deadline, or not receiving a reminder from HMRC, also fails. HMRC has no legal obligation to remind you. The responsibility for knowing and meeting filing and payment dates sits entirely with the taxpayer. A simple error in a return, such as a misplaced decimal point, will not cancel a penalty. HMRC will direct you to amend the return, and the penalty stands.
The principle running through all of this is consistent. A reasonable excuse must be an unavoidable obstacle, not a muddle or an oversight.
Five Steps to a Strong Appeal
If the grounds are genuine, how you present the case matters as much as the facts. Here is the approach we recommend.
- Be factual. State exactly what happened, clearly and briefly. An emotional letter carries far less weight than a precise account of events.
- Connect the excuse to the deadline. Show specifically how the event prevented you from filing or paying on time. A general account of a difficult period is not enough.
- Show what you did next. HMRC wants evidence that as soon as the obstacle cleared, you acted promptly. Delay after the excuse ended weakens the appeal.
- Provide documentation. Death certificates, hospital letters, screenshots of error messages, photographs of a flooded office. Concrete evidence turns a written explanation into a credible case.
- Apply the reasonable person standard. Frame your submission around how any responsible business owner would have acted in the same situation. This aligns directly with how HMRC assesses the claim.
One point worth holding onto: penalties apply to self-employed tax UK returns as well as business filings. The same five steps apply in both situations.
Key Takeaway
A reasonable excuse is not a loophole. It is a legitimate protection for genuine hardship, applied through a specific and evidenced process. The strongest protection against penalties is still solid business tax planning UK — deadlines in the diary, reminders set, and obligations understood well in advance. If the worst does happen, act quickly, gather evidence early, and present the facts without clutter.
If you are staring at a penalty notice right now, do not panic. Visit ihatenumbers.co.uk or get in touch and we can help you work through it.
Plan it, Do it, Profit.
“A reasonable excuse is not a free pass to be late. It is a safety net for genuine hardship.”
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Episode Timecodes
- 00:00 – Introduction: why reasonable excuse matters
- 01:00 – The sensible person test and how HMRC assesses your case
- 02:00 – What HMRC accepts: bereavement, illness, tech failure, natural disaster
- 03:30 – What HMRC rejects: the arguments that won’t hold up
- 05:00 – Five steps to building a strong penalty appeal
- 06:00 – Final thoughts and why planning ahead is still the best defence
Further Support
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