What you need to know: HMRC crypto nudge letters : what to do
Quick answer: An HMRC crypto nudge letter is a formal "we know about your crypto activity" prompt asking you to review your tax returns and disclose any unreported income or gains. The letter typically gives 30 days to respond. Voluntary disclosure (admitting and paying tax owed) within that window keeps penalties at the minimum…
Key points:
- Account holders' identities and addresses.
- Transaction volumes and totals.
- Account balances at year-end.
An HMRC crypto nudge letter is a formal "we know about your crypto activity" prompt asking you to review your tax returns and disclose any unreported income or gains. The letter typically gives 30 days to respond. Voluntary disclosure (admitting and paying tax owed) within that window keeps penalties at the minimum (0–10% of tax owed). Ignoring the letter or denying activity can escalate to a of tax owed plus or COP9 investigation, with penalties up to 200% of tax owed plus interest and possible criminal referral.
Why HMRC sent you a letter
HMRC has data-sharing agreements with major UK-facing crypto exchanges (Coinbase, Binance, Kraken, eToro, etc.) under the Common Reporting Standard. Each year, exchanges provide HMRC with:
- Account holders' identities and addresses.
- Transaction volumes and totals.
- Account balances at year-end.
HMRC cross-references this against tax returns. If you have crypto activity but haven't reported it, you're flagged for a nudge letter.
What the letter actually says
Nudge letters typically include:
- "We have information that you may have disposed of cryptoassets."
- "Please check your tax returns for the years 20X to 20Y."
- "If you have any unreported income or gains, you must come forward within 30 days."
- A link to HMRC's Cryptoasset Disclosure Service.
- Warning about penalties for ignoring the letter or making incomplete disclosure.
Your three options
1. Voluntary disclosure — recommended for most
If you had unreported crypto income or gains, declare them via the Cryptoasset Disclosure Service. Steps:
- Reconstruct your full crypto history (specialist software essential for active users).
- Compute the tax owed across all relevant tax years.
- Submit the disclosure online with full calculation.
- Pay the tax + interest + penalty (usually 0–10% if voluntary).
This is the cheapest route. Typical penalty: 5–10% of tax owed for "careless inaccuracy" or "failure to take reasonable care." Compare with 30–70% if HMRC opens a formal enquiry.
2. Confirm you have nothing to disclose
If you genuinely had no crypto income or gains (e.g. you only bought and held — no disposals), reply to the letter confirming this. HMRC will close the case. Keep evidence of your buy-and-hold record.
3. Ignore the letter — high risk
Ignoring the letter doesn't close the case. HMRC will typically escalate to a formal enquiry within 6–12 months. Penalties under enquiry are higher — typically 30–100% for "deliberate" inaccuracy, with potential for 200% for "deliberate and concealed."
Worked example — typical disclosure
UK investor with £80,000 of unreported crypto gains over 4 years (2021–2025)
| Cumulative gains across 4 tax years | £80,000 |
| Less 4 × £3,000 CGT allowance (2024/25 onwards lower) | £71,000 taxable |
| CGT at average 20% (mix of basic/higher rate) | £14,200 |
| Interest on late payment (~4 years at 7.75% avg) | ~£4,400 |
| Penalty if voluntary disclosure (5–10% of tax) | £710–£1,420 |
| Total payment under voluntary disclosure | £19,310–£20,020 |
| VS if HMRC discovers (30–70% penalty) | £22,860–£28,540 |
Voluntary disclosure saves £3,500–£8,500 in penalties on top of HMRC closing the case faster.
The penalty regime
| HMRC's classification | Penalty range |
|---|---|
| Reasonable care taken — no inaccuracy | 0% |
| Careless inaccuracy | 0–30% |
| Deliberate inaccuracy | 20–70% |
| Deliberate and concealed | 30–100% |
| Offshore non-compliance (deliberate, category 3) | Up to 200% |
Within each range, voluntary disclosure pushes the penalty toward the lower end. HMRC investigation pushes toward the higher end.
What to gather before responding
- All exchange statements for years specified in the letter.
- Wallet addresses you've used (for HMRC verification).
- Records of every disposal (sales, swaps, NFT trades, DeFi).
- GBP valuations at the moment of each transaction.
- Cost basis for each disposed token (from your section 104 pools).
Specialist crypto tax software (Koinly, Recap, CoinTracker) can reconstruct most of this from API/wallet imports. Allow 2–4 weeks for a full reconstruction.
Should you get specialist help?
For straightforward cases (a few hundred transactions, one exchange, simple buy-sell), self-disclosure via the Cryptoasset Disclosure Service is workable. For complex cases (DeFi, NFTs, multi-chain, multi-year, large amounts), specialist crypto tax accountants typically charge £1,000–£5,000 for a full reconstruction and HMRC submission — usually cheap relative to the penalty difference.
For very large amounts (£100k+ tax owed) or suspected deliberate non-compliance, instruct a tax barrister-supported team — Code of Practice 9 procedures and possible criminal referral need specialist defence.
Sources and methodology
HMRC's nudge letter campaign is part of the broader Common Reporting Standard data-sharing. See HMRC's Cryptoasset Disclosure Service. Penalty regime: Schedule 24 of the Finance Act 2007 (as amended). For a nudge letter response, see the tax adviser recommendation. The methodology page documents sources.
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