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Self-Assessment 3-Month Penalty: Daily £10 Charges Have Started (March 2026)

Updated: 10 March 2026 · Urgent guidance for late filers

🚨 If you haven't filed your 2024/25 tax return yet, read this now

The 31 January 2026 deadline passed over five weeks ago. As of 1 March 2026, HMRC is now charging £10 per day on top of the £100 initial penalty. Every day you wait costs you another tenner.

The fastest way to stop it: File your return today. Even with estimated figures. You can amend later.

Your current late filing penalty (if you haven't filed)
Calculating...

The penalty timeline

Here's how self-assessment late filing penalties stack up:

WhenWhat happensCumulative cost
1 February 2026£100 automatic penalty (even if no tax owed)£100
1 March 2026Daily penalties begin: £10/day for up to 90 days£100 + £10/day
Today ()You're days into daily penalties
31 May 2026Daily penalties end (90 days max = £900)£1,000
1 August 20266-month penalty: £300 or 5% of tax due (whichever greater)£1,300+
1 February 202712-month penalty: another £300 or 5% (serious cases up to 100%)£1,600+
⚠️ These are filing penalties only. If you also owe tax, there are separate late payment penalties plus interest at the current HMRC rate. The total cost of not filing can escalate very quickly.

How to stop the penalties right now

Step 1: File immediately — even with estimates

This is the single most important thing. Filing stops the daily penalties on the day you submit.

Don't have your exact figures? That's not a reason to wait. HMRC explicitly allows you to file with reasonable estimates and amend your return later. A filed return with estimates is infinitely better than no return at all.

Step 2: Log in to Government Gateway

Go to HMRC online services and log in. Navigate to Self Assessment → Complete your tax return.

If you've lost your Government Gateway details, you can recover them online. If you've never registered, do it now — though it will take time for your UTR and activation code to arrive.

Step 3: Fill in the essentials

For a basic self-employed return, you need:

Step 4: Submit and note the confirmation

Save your submission reference. This is your proof of filing date — it's what stops the penalty clock.

Step 5: Pay what you can

If you owe tax but can't pay in full, set up a Time to Pay arrangement. HMRC is generally willing to agree payment plans, especially if you contact them before enforcement action starts.

Can you get the penalties cancelled?

Possibly — if you have a reasonable excuse. See our complete guide to reasonable excuses for what HMRC accepts and how to appeal.

Common reasonable excuses:

Not reasonable excuses: "I forgot", "I was busy", "I didn't have the money", "I found it confusing".

💡 File first, appeal second. Filing now stops the daily penalties. You can appeal the earlier penalties separately. Don't wait to appeal before filing — that just makes the total penalty bigger.

What if you can't pay the tax bill?

Filing and paying are separate obligations. You can and should file even if you can't pay.

Options if you can't pay:

Don't have a Government Gateway account?

If you've never filed before and don't have a UTR or Government Gateway account, you're in a trickier position because registration takes time. But you still need to act:

  1. Register for self-assessment immediately
  2. Call HMRC's Self Assessment helpline (0300 200 3310) and explain the situation
  3. Ask about filing a paper return (SA100) while you wait for online access

For a complete walkthrough of the registration and filing process, see our first self-assessment guide.

The bottom line

Every day you don't file costs £10. The maths is brutal and simple:

There is no scenario where waiting helps. File now, sort the details later.

Related guides

📦 Sort Your Self-Assessment — Stop the Penalties

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