Criminal HMRC Investigations

Quick Overview

Criminal HMRC Investigations — Key Facts

HMRC operates two investigative tracks: civil and criminal. Where it suspects deliberate concealment, systematic fraud, or abuse of a position of trust, it will initiate a criminal investigation under PACE — with powers of arrest, search warrants, and prosecution.

  • Increased Sentencing: The Finance Act 2024 doubled the maximum prison sentence for the most serious tax fraud offences from 7 to 14 years.
  • Strict Liability for Corporates: Under the Criminal Finances Act 2017, companies are criminally liable if they fail to prevent the facilitation of tax evasion by an employee or agent.
  • Stop Notices: Promoting a tax avoidance scheme in defiance of an HMRC Stop Notice is a specific criminal offence.
  • Code of Practice 9: Where HMRC suspects fraud but offers a civil route, it proceeds under COP9. Suspected serious criminality triggers a criminal investigation under PACE.
  • Civil vs Criminal: Early legal intervention can often steer an investigation back toward a civil settlement, avoiding the risk of prosecution and imprisonment.

Under investigation?

Facing a Criminal HMRC Investigations

Speak to a specialist criminal defence solicitor immediately. Early legal advice is critical when facing investigation or potential charges.

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When Does HMRC Choose to Prosecute?

HMRC generally reserves criminal prosecution for cases involving deliberate or dishonest conduct. Common triggers include systematic fraud, abuse of a high-responsibility position, submission of forged documentation, materially false statements made during a civil audit, or a history of previous fiscal offences.

The Finance Act 2024 — Increased Sentences

Section 32 of the Finance Act 2024 increased the maximum term of imprisonment for the most serious tax fraud offences — including Cheating the Public Revenue — from 7 to 14 years. This reflects the government's intention to treat serious tax evasion with the same severity as other high-level financial crimes.

Failure to Prevent the Facilitation of Tax Evasion

Under the Criminal Finances Act 2017, companies can be prosecuted if an associated person facilitates tax evasion. This is a strict liability offence — the company can be guilty even if the board was entirely unaware. The only available defence is to demonstrate that reasonable prevention procedures were in place.

Code of Practice 9

Where HMRC suspects fraudulent conduct but offers the taxpayer an opportunity to make full and complete disclosure, it will proceed under Code of Practice 9 — a civil process. However, failure to make a complete disclosure or any attempt to mislead HMRC during COP9 can result in escalation to a criminal enquiry.

What to Do if You Are Under Investigation

If you are contacted by HMRC's Fraud Investigation Service, have been arrested, or are asked to attend an interview under caution, seek specialist legal advice immediately. Do not speak to HMRC investigators without a solicitor present. The distinction between a civil and a criminal investigation can change rapidly.

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HMRC Investigation FAQ

How long can HMRC investigate historical tax matters?
For deliberate inaccuracies, HMRC can investigate up to 20 years back. Standard enquiry windows are much shorter — but where fraud is suspected, the extended window applies. Furlough fraud is categorised as tax fraud for these purposes.
What is Code of Practice 9?
COP9 is a civil process offered by HMRC where it suspects fraud but gives the taxpayer an opportunity to make full disclosure in exchange for a civil rather than criminal outcome. Failure to make complete disclosure, or any attempt to mislead, can cause the investigation to be escalated to criminal proceedings.
Can a company be prosecuted for an employee's actions?
Yes. Under the Criminal Finances Act 2017, a company commits a strict liability offence if an associated person facilitates tax evasion on its behalf — even if the board was unaware. The only defence is to demonstrate that reasonable prevention procedures were in place.
What charges can follow a criminal HMRC investigation?
The most serious charge is Cheating the Public Revenue, which now carries a maximum of 14 years. Other charges include Fraud by False Representation and Money Laundering under POCA 2002. Director disqualification and confiscation orders often follow conviction.
Fraud

HMRC Investigation

Facing this allegation is serious — and often unexpected. Early specialist advice makes all the difference to the outcome.

Quick Overview
Criminal HMRC Investigations — Key Facts

HMRC operates two investigative tracks: civil and criminal. Where it suspects deliberate concealment, systematic fraud, or abuse of a position of trust, it will initiate a criminal investigation under PACE — with powers of arrest, search warrants, and prosecution.

  • Increased SentencingThe Finance Act 2024 doubled the maximum prison sentence for the most serious tax fraud offences from 7 to 14 years.
  • Strict Liability for CorporatesUnder the Criminal Finances Act 2017, companies are criminally liable if they fail to prevent the facilitation of tax evasion by an employee or agent.
  • Stop NoticesPromoting a tax avoidance scheme in defiance of an HMRC Stop Notice is a specific criminal offence.
  • Code of Practice 9Where HMRC suspects fraud but offers a civil route, it proceeds under COP9. Suspected serious criminality triggers a criminal investigation under PACE.
  • Civil vs CriminalEarly legal intervention can often steer an investigation back toward a civil settlement, avoiding the risk of prosecution and imprisonment.
Full article below ↓

When Does HMRC Choose to Prosecute?

HMRC generally reserves criminal prosecution for cases involving deliberate or dishonest conduct. Common triggers include systematic fraud, abuse of a high-responsibility position, submission of forged documentation, materially false statements made during a civil audit, or a history of previous fiscal offences.

The Finance Act 2024 — Increased Sentences

Section 32 of the Finance Act 2024 increased the maximum term of imprisonment for the most serious tax fraud offences — including Cheating the Public Revenue — from 7 to 14 years. This reflects the government's intention to treat serious tax evasion with the same severity as other high-level financial crimes.

Failure to Prevent the Facilitation of Tax Evasion

Under the Criminal Finances Act 2017, companies can be prosecuted if an associated person facilitates tax evasion. This is a strict liability offence — the company can be guilty even if the board was entirely unaware. The only available defence is to demonstrate that reasonable prevention procedures were in place.

Code of Practice 9

Where HMRC suspects fraudulent conduct but offers the taxpayer an opportunity to make full and complete disclosure, it will proceed under Code of Practice 9 — a civil process. However, failure to make a complete disclosure or any attempt to mislead HMRC during COP9 can result in escalation to a criminal enquiry.

What to Do if You Are Under Investigation

If you are contacted by HMRC's Fraud Investigation Service, have been arrested, or are asked to attend an interview under caution, seek specialist legal advice immediately. Do not speak to HMRC investigators without a solicitor present. The distinction between a civil and a criminal investigation can change rapidly.

"The distinction between a civil and a criminal investigation can change rapidly. Contact from HMRC's Fraud Investigation Service is a strong indicator the matter is being treated criminally."

— Lostock Legal Solicitors
Contacted by HMRC's Fraud Investigation Service?
Do not speak without advice.

Contact from FIS means the matter is being treated as criminal. Early legal intervention can often steer the case back toward a civil settlement — but only if you act promptly.

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Common questions

HMRC Investigation FAQ

For deliberate inaccuracies, HMRC can investigate up to 20 years back. Standard enquiry windows are much shorter — but where fraud is suspected, the extended window applies. Furlough fraud is categorised as tax fraud for these purposes.

COP9 is a civil process offered by HMRC where it suspects fraud but gives the taxpayer an opportunity to make full disclosure in exchange for a civil rather than criminal outcome. Failure to make complete disclosure, or any attempt to mislead, can cause the investigation to be escalated to criminal proceedings.

Yes. Under the Criminal Finances Act 2017, a company commits a strict liability offence if an associated person facilitates tax evasion on its behalf — even if the board was unaware. The only defence is to demonstrate that reasonable prevention procedures were in place.

The most serious charge is Cheating the Public Revenue, which now carries a maximum of 14 years. Other charges include Fraud by False Representation and Money Laundering under POCA 2002. Director disqualification and confiscation orders often follow conviction.