A settlement opportunity for employers who have used Employee Benefit Trusts (EBT) to avoid tax will close in March 2015, HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) has confirmed.
The initiative, which launched in April 2011, has raised £800 million in tax and National Insurance Contributions from around 700 employers who previously used the trusts as tax avoidance vehicles.
HMRC expects others to settle in the near future and says it will pursue those who don't do so through the courts as it does not believe that schemes using EBTs to avoid paying Income Tax and National Insurance work.
HMRC says that some individuals seeking to use EBTs to avoid tax have tried to use the Liechtenstein Disclosure Facility (LDF) – under which individuals with undeclared offshore assets can regularise their tax affairs – to find another route to pay less tax. HMRC and the Liechtenstein government have made changes to the LDF which, among other things, mean that users of EBTs that are caught by the Disclosure of Tax Avoidance Scheme (DOTAS) rules cannot take advantage of the full terms of the facility.
They should engage in the EBT settlement opportunity instead, while it is still available.
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Jennie Granger, HMRC's Director General of Enforcement and Compliance, said: "Time is running out for anyone who used an EBT to avoid paying tax and still hasn't settled with HMRC through the settlement opportunity.