Number of UK tax planning schemes drops to record low

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Number of UK tax planning schemes drops to record low

ukflagg.jpg

Fewer tax planning schemes were reported to HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) in the year to September 2013 than in any of the past 10 years.

Research conducted by Pinsent Masons shows that this year has seen fewer schemes reported than in any year since mandatory disclosure was introduced in 2004.

The 2004 Disclosure of Tax Avoidance Schemes (DOTAS) legislation was introduced to help HMRC identify new tax avoidance schemes and judge whether to amend the law accordingly.

“The figures show that HMRC is taking a tougher stance on tax avoidance and winning the battle, if not the war, to eliminate elaborate tax schemes,” said Jason Collins, head of tax at Pinsent Masons. “They have been successful in dissuading the bigger accountancy firms from creating new tax avoidance schemes with many major professional services firms now avoiding the more extreme forms of tax planning as it carries with it a reputational risk.”

“Companies and high-earning taxpayers may still look for new ways to minimise their tax bill but the fact that there were just a fraction of new schemes last year compared to previous years suggests HMRC is doing a better job at using its understanding of existing avoidance schemes to police the promoters and close loopholes in the law – often before they can be fully exploited,” added Collins.

Collins said the government should now consider an amnesty for existing schemes.

“HMRC is getting better at using the stick, but it could recover more of what it considers to be the UK’s missing taxes by making more use of the carrot,” said Collins.

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

The newly combined firm brings together more than 3,500 practitioners across 52 offices, with flagship hubs in Seattle, London, Sydney and New York.
Building a transparent culture, prioritising internal promotions and being different from the big four are all key features of A&M Tax’s ambitious plans for India
ITR’s Indirect Tax Forum 2026 showed why harmonisation remains elusive, advisers must raise their game, and ‘everyone’s data is rubbish’
The firm’s board has reportedly asked Kevin Burrowes to continue until 2028 as the KPMG Australia scandal raises expectations of regulatory reform
A former Deloitte partner will lead the firm’s latest geographic expansion; in other news, Baker McKenzie added six tax lawyers to its partnership
The Fair Tax Mark now extends to domestic-only companies with turnover above €1m, with Thai travel operator Tripseed the first to be certified
A technology provider had to be educated on technical requirements by Joseph Ribkoff’s IT team, a tax manager at the company said
But businesses should remain flexible when choosing between internal and external resources to handle added ViDA complexity, ITR’s Indirect Tax forum also heard
Non-compliance from small businesses continues to account for most of the gap, HM Revenue and Customs revealed
The new managing director of R&D tax relief consultancy ForrestBrown tells ITR about his priorities for the business, where he’s focusing his time and what makes tax cool
Gift this article