HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) is increasingly focused on IR35 compliance and enforcement, and businesses with large contractor populations and complex supply chains are most exposed to risk from an enquiry.
There is no uniform approach to how enquiries commence. HMRC tends to request a wide range of information, broadly focused on a business’ IR35 compliance processes and status determinations. The first contact from HMRC may involve a generic information gathering exercise, with no indication that a protracted enquiry could follow. However, initial communications often precede more formal exchanges asking targeted questions.
To manage risks and reduce the scope of a possible HMRC enquiry, businesses should seek advice before responding to any IR35 information request from HMRC. Businesses should maintain comprehensive IR35 compliance procedures, which are regularly reviewed to ensure they remain robust.
IR35 targets the use of ‘personal service companies’ (PSCs) to avoid employment taxes. Broadly, where a business engages an individual ‘off-payroll’ and through an intermediary such as a PSC, the individual can achieve employment tax savings, whilst the business is not required to pay employer national insurance contributions (NICs) – currently at 13.8%.
When a business engages with an individual through a PSC, IR35 requires that the individual should be taxed as an employee, if they would have been deemed to be an employee for tax purposes if they had engaged directly with the business.
From 6 April 2021, when a business engages with an individual through a PSC, the business is required to determine if the engagement falls ‘inside IR35’ – that is, whether the individual would be an employee for tax purposes if they had engaged directly with the business. The engaging business, known as the ‘client’, is also required to issue a ‘status determination statement’ (SDS) to the individual worker and any other intermediary the client contracts with, confirming its determination and providing reasons.
If the client determines that an engagement falls inside IR35, the worker should be paid through the Pay As You Earn (PAYE) scheme. Employer NICs in respect of payments made to the worker will also be due. Where the client engages with the PSC indirectly through another intermediary, such as a recruitment agency, the agency, known as the fee payer, will be responsible for deducting and accounting for PAYE taxes and NICs.
IR35 risk management strategies vary according to the nature of the engaging business. However, HMRC will expect all businesses engaging off-payroll workers to have considered IR35. Prior to April 2021, HMRC repeatedly advised businesses to review their contractor populations and introduce IR35 compliance programmes. Prior to engagement, PSC workers should be identified, status determinations completed and SDSs issued to the workers and relevant third parties in the contractual chain. IR35 compliance procedures should be regularly reviewed to ensure that they remain fit for purpose and that individuals responsible for compliance receive adequate training.
The changes to IR35 created significant compliance challenges for businesses, particularly those with complex supply chains that are heavily reliant on flexible labour to meet resourcing needs. To manage IR35 tax risks, many businesses sought to engage all PSC workers through third party recruitment agencies whereby the agencies, as the fee payers, would be responsible for paying any taxes on fees paid to PSC workers determined as falling ‘inside IR35’.
Using a recruitment agency doesn’t eliminate IR35 risks. The engaging business remains responsible for making IR35 determinations and issuing SDSs for all PSC workers engaged indirectly by an agency. Responsibility for paying IR35 related taxes, and any interest and penalties that may become due, can also transfer back up the supply chain to the engaging business if it hasn’t taken reasonable care when making IR35 determinations and issuing SDSs. Therefore, ensuring that a business has taken reasonable care is pivotal to an effective IR35 risk management strategy, particularly when a business engages PSC workers through third party agencies.
Reasonable care is not defined. HMRC guidance provides a non-exhaustive list of ‘behaviours’ indicating whether reasonable care has, or has not, been taken when making status determinations. Primarily, HMRC expects a business to undertake a ‘complete and thorough’ assessment to determine whether a PSC worker should have been an employee for tax purposes if engaged directly.
There is no codified legal test to determine employment status for tax purposes. The test has been developed through court decisions and is based on several factors – including whether there is a mutuality of obligation between the parties, the level of control that a business has over the worker, whether the worker can provide a substitute, how integrated the worker is in the client’s business and whether the worker is in business on their own account. HMRC has published detailed guidance and has also developed the ‘Check Employment Status for Tax’ (CEST) tool to determine employment status for tax purposes of specific workers.
HMRC has said that it will stand by a CEST determination, as long as the information inputted remains true and accurate. CEST may not always provide a determination and is estimated to fail in 15% of cases.
HMRC expressly lists the ‘accurate’ use of CEST as indicative of taking reasonable care when making status determinations. Therefore, using the tool as part of a comprehensive IR35 compliance programme may be beneficial if HMRC raises an enquiry.
HMRC confirmed that it would not impose penalties other than for deliberate non-compliance for 12 months after implementation of the new IR35 rules. Consequently, HMRC compliance activity tends to focus on the tax year beginning April 2022. Initial communication from HMRC may arise in the following circumstances:
Generic off-payroll working questionnaires are increasingly followed by targeted HMRC questions, which may seek more detailed information about IR35 processes and how status determinations are made. HMRC may also request to review a sample of contracts with PSC workers and their status determinations.
At the outset, it’s important to manage the wider risks of an enquiry commencing. On this basis, businesses should consider seeking specialist advice upon receiving any IR35 or off-payroll working related communication from HMRC.