Base rate increases again
The Bank of England raised the base rate of interest to its highest level since 2009. What is the full story and what does this mean for payments due to HMRC?

At 1 December 2021, the BoE base rate was 0.1%. It has already been increased three times since. The BoA has now announced that the rate is increased to 1%, which is a 13-year high. Of course, a number of other rates that affect individuals are pegged to the base rate – including HMRC’s penalty interest rate that applies to tax paid late. The late payment tax rate is set at the BoE base rate plus 2.5%. Unfortunately, this interest applies to all late payments, even where a time to pay arrangement has been agreed. Anyone on such a plan may wish to accelerate payments, as the instalments will be more expensive once HMRC increases the rate to 3.5%. This is also unlikely to be the last rate hike, with the next review due on 16 June.
The rate of repayment interest, i.e. where HMRC owe the taxpayer money, remains at 0.5%. This is set at the base rate minus 1%, with a lower limit of 0.5%. This will not increase until the base rate increases above 1.5%.
Related Topics
-
How long does a capital loss last?
You’ve made a large capital gain from a recent sale. Capital losses can reduce the amount on which you have to pay tax but the losses you have date back decades and weren’t reported to HMRC. Is it too late to claim tax relief for them?
-
Salary transparency on recruitment
A pay transparency survey has revealed that 70% of employers intend to share salary ranges with external candidates during recruitment ahead of the EU Pay Transparency Directive coming into force. Will this become a legal requirement?
-
HMRC has recently expanded the scope of taxpayers who can arrange a payment plan online. What are the new parameters and conditions?
HMRC has recently expanded the scope of taxpayers who can arrange a payment plan online. What are the new parameters and conditions?