Free 20-min tax review — we guarantee to find £1,000+ in savings or you owe us nothing. Claim yours →
Updated 30 April 2026 · HMRC & Compliance

Got an HMRC nudge letter? The 30-day playbook (and the 7 things not to say)

Sutton Roff worked example chart for hmrc-nudge-letter-30-day-playbook

An HMRC “nudge letter” lands roughly the same way a parking ticket does: badly designed envelope, opening line in passive voice, and an alarmingly short response window. The letter isn’t an investigation. It’s HMRC’s signal that they have data suggesting you’ve under-declared something — usually one specific income source — and they’re inviting you to come forward voluntarily before they escalate. Get the next 30 days right and you’ll save tens of thousands. Get them wrong and the same cost-of-living-crisis HMRC will turn into the most expensive professional services bill of your life.

What a nudge letter actually is

HMRC’s Connect system pulls data from 30+ sources — bank account interest, Land Registry, Companies House, Airbnb, eBay, Vinted, Spotlight, OnlyFans, Twitch, AdSense, foreign tax authorities under CRS reporting, and many more. When the data flags an anomaly (e.g. £80k of YouTube income vs zero declared self-employment), Connect generates a candidate. A human officer reviews and either:

The nudge letter has a 30-day deadline by convention. If you respond — even just with “I’m engaging professional advice and will revert” — they’ll usually wait. If you ignore it, HMRC opens the formal enquiry and the discount on penalties drops sharply.

The 30-day playbook

Days 1–3: Don’t panic, don’t reply yet.

Days 4–10: Build the timeline.

Days 11–15: Engage a specialist accountant.

Days 16–25: Choose the disclosure route.

Days 26–30: File the notification, prepare the calculation.

The 7 things NOT to say

  1. “I didn’t know I had to declare it.” Ignorance isn’t a defence. It also escalates the penalty rating from “non-deliberate” to potentially “deliberate concealment” if HMRC believes you should have known.
  2. “My accountant should have told me.” Doesn’t reduce your liability. Pursue your accountant separately if needed; don’t lead with it to HMRC.
  3. “I’ll just pay what I owe; I don’t need to disclose properly.” Without formal disclosure, you don’t get the reduced penalty rates. Paying without disclosing leaves you exposed to investigation and full penalties.
  4. “It was only a small amount.” HMRC’s penalty banding is by behaviour and disclosure quality, not amount. Don’t minimise.
  5. “It’s not really income because [reason].” If you’re disputing whether the income is taxable at all, you need a different process — but don’t argue it informally in a nudge response. Get advice first.
  6. Anything about other income sources that aren’t covered by their letter. If you have other undeclared sources, deal with them in the disclosure — but don’t volunteer them to the original letter without thinking through the disclosure scope.
  7. “I’ll get back to you.” …and then don’t. Silence after a nudge letter is the single biggest predictor of a full enquiry.

Penalty bands

For non-deliberate, prompted disclosure, the penalty bandings are roughly:

Behaviour + cooperation Penalty range Typical landing point
Voluntary, full cooperation 0%–30% 10–15%
Prompted (after enquiry) 15%–30% 20–25%
Deliberate, prompted 35%–70% 50%
Deliberate concealment 50%–100% 70%
Foreign income deliberate up to 200% varies

Behaviour and cooperation determine where in the band you land. Voluntary disclosure following a nudge letter is the single biggest lever you have.

Behaviour and cooperation determine where in the band you land. Voluntary disclosure following a nudge letter is the single biggest lever you have.

How long does it take to close?

For a clean case where you cooperate fully:

For complex cases or those that escalate to formal enquiry: 18 months to 3+ years.

Key takeaways

FAQ

Can I extend the 30-day deadline?

Yes — HMRC will usually accept an extension if you respond promptly explaining you’re engaging professional advice. A short letter on day 5 saying “I’m engaging an accountant; will respond within X days” protects the relationship.

What if I genuinely don’t owe anything?

Reply briefly explaining the position — ideally with a specialist’s help to make sure your wording doesn’t accidentally widen scope. A “nothing to declare” reply still needs careful framing because of how penalty regimes interact.

Should I tell my accountant about this?

Yes — ideally a specialist accountant who handles HMRC enquiries, not necessarily your everyday compliance accountant. Disclosure work and standard year-end accountancy are different specialties.

If a nudge letter has landed — or you suspect one might — the worst thing to do is wait. Book a confidential 20-min call within the 30-day window. We’ll review the letter, scope the likely exposure, and agree the next steps. Specialist HMRC defence accountants.

Shahood Ahmed
About the author

Shahood Ahmed BSc · FMAAT · AFA · MIPA

Founder & Managing Director · AudTax

Shahood is a fully qualified accountant with UK memberships across the AAT, IFA and IPA. After years in London practice, he founded AudTax to give UK business owners the proactive, partner-led accounting the big firms don't deliver — fixed fees, same-day replies, and a partner on the end of the phone who actually knows your business.

Ready to talk to us?

Get business advice now.

From cashflow to business growth, we'll make it feel easy. If you're ready to take the next step and get your business on the path to growth, get in touch today so we can learn about your plans.

Chat with us
Call WhatsApp Book review