{"id":122239,"date":"2026-06-26T11:45:00","date_gmt":"2026-06-26T10:45:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/en.econostrum.info\/uk\/?p=122239"},"modified":"2026-06-26T11:05:00","modified_gmt":"2026-06-26T10:05:00","slug":"hmrc-take-money-from-your-account-directly","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/en.econostrum.info\/uk\/hmrc-take-money-from-your-account-directly\/","title":{"rendered":"Major HMRC Change Could Let Taxman Take Money Directly From Your Account"},"content":{"rendered":"
HM Revenue and Customs<\/strong> could be given expanded powers to take money directly from taxpayers\u2019 bank accounts<\/strong> to recover even small unpaid debts<\/strong>, under new government proposals designed to improve debt collection and reduce the volume of outstanding tax owed across the UK system.<\/p>\n The proposals would extend HMRC\u2019s<\/strong> existing ability to recover unpaid tax directly from bank and building society accounts without requiring a court order. At present, enforcement action includes safeguards such as ensuring individuals are left with at least \u00a35,000 a<\/strong>cross their accounts and carrying out additional checks before funds are removed.<\/p>\n Under the new plans, these protections could be reduced or removed in cases involving smaller debts, allowing HMRC to recover funds more quickly from individuals who have not engaged with repayment requests. The Direct Recovery of Debts<\/strong><\/a> system was first introduced in 2015 but was paused during the Covid-19 pandemic before being reactivated in late 2025.<\/p>\n The government says the existing framework is not well suited to recovering large numbers of low-value debts from individuals who repeatedly fail to respond to HMRC contact. Officials argue this creates gaps in enforcement and contributes to billions of pounds in unpaid tax each year.<\/p>\n HMRC estimates that around one in ten taxpayers fail to pay their taxes in full and on time, with total unpaid tax reaching around \u00a3100 billion<\/strong>. More than 750,000 low-value debts,<\/strong> worth over \u00a32 billion collectively<\/strong>, are returned annually to HMRC<\/strong> after unsuccessful recovery attempts through external debt collection agencies.<\/p>\nExpansion Of Direct Recovery Powers<\/h2>\n

\u00a0<\/h2>\n
Focus On Low-Value And Persistent Debts<\/h2>\n
Safeguards And Notification Process<\/h2>\n