A savings tax review

The way savings are taxed is being reviewed by the Office of Tax Simplification (OTS).

The way savings are taxed is being reviewed by the Office of Tax Simplification (OTS).

The OTS is looking at the way in which savings and investment income is taxed, which can be very complicated. According to its paper, published in May 2018, “the interactions between the [tax] rates and allowances is sufficiently complex at the margins that HMRC’s self-assessment computer software has sometimes failed to get it right”.

The complex marginal rules mean that, “many taxpayers continue to worry about the tax treatment of their savings income even when they do not in fact have anything further to pay, and there are also many specific complexities which taxpayers find difficult and confusing”.

To make matters worse, the OTS also found that 95% of people do not pay tax on savings income, thanks to a combination of the personal savings allowance (£1,000 for basic rate taxpayers and £500 for higher rate taxpayers) and the dividend allowance (£2,000).

The OTS paper makes a range of recommendations, including: