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HMRC · Nudge letters · 2026/27

HMRC nudge letters — what they mean (2026/27)

An HMRC nudge letter is a pre-investigation prompt — HMRC has data suggesting you may have undeclared income or tax owed, and is giving you the chance to disclose voluntarily before opening a formal compliance check. Common triggers in 2026: overseas bank accounts (Common Reporting Standard), crypto exchange data, rental property records, online marketplace earnings (eBay, Etsy, Vinted), and dividend distributions from offshore funds.

6-minute read

Nudge letters in one paragraph: HMRC's "Wealthy External Forum" and the Letter of Offer team send hundreds of thousands of "nudge letters" each year. They typically say "we have information that you may have received [X type of income] which doesn't appear on your tax return. Please review and contact us within 30/60/90 days." This is NOT a formal investigation — it's a prompt designed to encourage voluntary disclosure. Responding correctly often avoids penalty escalation; ignoring almost always makes things worse.

What triggers a nudge letter in 2026

Common 2026 trigger categories:

How to recognise a nudge letter

Characteristics of HMRC nudge letters:

How to verify it's genuine (because scammers use this format):

  1. Cross-check the reference number against your HMRC online account
  2. Call HMRC on a number from gov.uk (NOT a number on the letter) to confirm
  3. Genuine HMRC letters never ask for payment via prepaid cards, vouchers, or to a specific bank account by phone — those are scams

How to respond — the four options

Option 1: Nothing to disclose

If you've already declared all relevant income (or you have a genuine reason to believe HMRC's data is wrong), respond:

Caveat: signing a Certificate of Tax Position knowingly falsely is a criminal offence. Don't sign one to "make HMRC go away" if there's something undisclosed.

Option 2: Voluntary disclosure for small amounts

If you find undisclosed income/gains under ~£5,000 in tax:

Option 3: Voluntary disclosure for larger amounts

If you find undisclosed income/gains over £5,000 in tax, or if you've been deliberately concealing:

Option 4: Ignore (don't)

Ignoring a nudge letter typically leads to:

The Certificate of Tax Position trap

Some nudge letter campaigns include a "Certificate of Tax Position" — a signed statement that you've fully declared all income. Sign without verifying and you commit a serious offence if anything is missing.

Best practice if a Certificate is enclosed:

  1. Do NOT sign immediately
  2. Review your records thoroughly (past 4-6 years depending on offshore vs UK)
  3. If anything is unclear, get professional advice before signing
  4. If you decide to sign, keep certified copies of all supporting documentation for at least 6 years
  5. If you choose NOT to sign (no obligation to sign), reply to the letter stating you've reviewed and have nothing to declare

What HMRC actually knows

HMRC's data sources in 2026:

The implication: HMRC's information advantage is greater than it has ever been. Voluntary disclosure remains far better than discovered evasion.

Penalty levels

BehaviourUnprompted disclosurePrompted disclosure
Careless (mistake)0-30%15-30%
Deliberate (not concealed)20-70%35-70%
Deliberate and concealed30-100%50-100%

Offshore matters carry higher penalty ranges (up to 200%) depending on territory category (cooperative, semi-cooperative, non-cooperative).

Penalties are reduced for "quality of disclosure" — telling, helping, giving access to records. Aim for "maximum quality" to get the lowest end of the range.

When to get professional advice

You should get an accountant or tax solicitor involved if:

Tax advisers commonly charge £200-£500 to review the letter and advise on response, with full disclosure work running into thousands. The cost is almost always less than the penalty exposure.

Common nudge letter mistakes

Sources

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