VAT late payment penalties
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VAT late payment penalties for limited companies
If your business is VAT registered, getting a return or payment wrong can feel stressful enough. Getting it in late is worse, because that is when HMRC’s penalty and interest regime kicks in.
From January 2023 the old VAT default surcharge was replaced with a new system that separates VAT penalties for late payment from penalties for late submission. The rules were tightened again in April 2025, with higher percentages for both late payment penalties and interest.
The good news is that if you understand how VAT penalties late payment rules work, you can usually minimise the damage and, with the right systems in place, avoid most penalties completely.
In this guide, we break down the current VAT late payment penalty rules for UK limited companies, what happens if you file or pay late, and the practical steps you can take to stay on the right side of HMRC.
An overview of VAT penalties for late payment and late returns
There are now three moving parts to think about:
- A late payment penalty, based on how long you take to pay your VAT bill.
- A points based late submission penalty, which applies when you file VAT returns late.
- Late payment interest, charged daily from the day the VAT falls due.
For accounting periods starting on or after 1 January 2023, all VAT registered businesses are in this new regime. The same rules apply whether your return shows VAT to pay, a nil return or a repayment return.
For most owner managed companies, the biggest issues are:
- Not realising there is now a short grace period but higher penalties once you go beyond it.
- Confusing late filing penalties with VAT penalties late payment on the actual tax.
- Underestimating how quickly daily interest and daily penalties add up if cash flow is already tight.
H2: How VAT late payment penalties work in 2026
HMRC’s guidance sets out clear bands for how VAT late payment penalties apply.
Days 1 to 15 overdue – interest only
If you pay your VAT bill in full within 15 days of the due date:
- You do not get a late payment penalty.
- You do pay late payment interest from day 1 until the day you clear the balance.
In other words, there is a short breathing space where interest still hurts, but VAT penalties for late payment have not yet started.
Days 16 to 30 overdue – first late payment penalty
If your VAT is still unpaid between day 16 and day 30:
- HMRC charges a first late payment penalty of 3% of what was outstanding at day 15.
- Late payment interest continues to accrue daily on the outstanding balance.
There is no second penalty yet, but the cost is already starting to bite.
Day 31 onwards – higher penalties and daily charges
If you reach day 31 with VAT still unpaid, things get more expensive:
- The first late payment penalty becomes 3% of what is still outstanding at day 15, plus 3% of what is still outstanding at day 30.
- A second late payment penalty starts to run, calculated daily at an annual rate of 10% of the outstanding VAT. This continues until the VAT is paid, or until HMRC reaches the two year assessment limit.
- Late payment interest is still charged in addition, at base rate plus 4%, from day 1 until you clear the balance.
By this point, VAT penalties late payment and interest combined can be a sizeable extra cost on top of the original bill, especially for growing businesses with six figure VAT liabilities.
VAT penalty points for late submission of VAT returns
Even if you pay on time, filing the VAT return itself late can trigger a separate penalty.
The VAT penalty points system
From 1 January 2023, late VAT returns give you penalty points instead of an automatic surcharge.
- Each late VAT return earns one penalty point.
- Once you reach the penalty point threshold for your filing frequency, HMRC charges a £200 penalty.
- Every further late return while you are at the threshold triggers another £200 penalty.
The thresholds are:
- Annual returns: threshold of 2 points.
- Quarterly returns: threshold of 4 points.
- Monthly returns: threshold of 5 points.
Most limited companies file quarterly, so four late returns, even spread over a long period, can be enough to start regular £200 penalties on top of any VAT penalties late payment.
Resetting penalty points
You can reset your penalty points to zero by:
- Submitting all outstanding VAT returns for the previous 24 months, and
- Completing a period of compliance, where you file all returns on time for a set number of periods (two annual, four quarterly or six-monthly returns, depending on your filing frequency).
This gives otherwise compliant businesses a route back to a clean slate if they have had a rough patch.
Typical VAT late payment scenarios for owner managed companies
To bring this to life, here are three common situations we see with limited company clients.
1. The one-off cash flow crunch
The company hits a short-term cash squeeze, perhaps due to a slow paying customer or a large investment and pays its VAT 10 to 12 days late.
- Result: no VAT penalties late payment, but late payment interest from day 1 to the day the bill is paid.
- Risk: if you also file the VAT return late, you pick up a penalty point on the late submission side.
In this situation, AGILE’s advice is usually to file on time regardless, and if needed, talk to HMRC early about a Time to Pay arrangement to avoid drifting into penalty territory.
2. Regularly paying a couple of weeks late
Some companies fall into a habit of paying VAT a few days or weeks late each quarter.
- If payments consistently slip beyond 15 days, you will start to see the first late payment penalty at 3%.
- Repeating this pattern all year can add up to a meaningful extra tax cost, especially after the April 2025 increase in penalty percentages and interest.
Here, getting bank feeds, rolling forecasts and VAT provisions into your monthly management accounts can make a big difference. You get better visibility of upcoming liabilities, rather than discovering the problem at the due date.
3. Persistently late payers
Where VAT is paid 30 days or more late, or left unpaid entirely, you are quickly into:
- First late payment penalties of up to 6% of the VAT bill,
- Second late payment penalties at 10% per year on the debt, and
- Daily interest at base plus 4%.
In these cases, an open conversation with HMRC about a realistic Time to Pay plan is usually better than hoping it goes away.
How to reduce or avoid VAT penalties for late payment
The key to managing VAT penalties late payment is action, not panic.
Always submit your VAT return on time
Late submission points and late payment penalties are separate. If you know you are going to struggle to pay:
- File the VAT return on time anyway.
- You will avoid penalty points and £200 late submission fines.
- You can then focus on managing the VAT debt and avoiding or limiting late payment penalties.
Submitting both late deprives you of that flexibility and can put you in the firing line twice.
Use Time to Pay to protect against higher penalties
HMRC’s own guidance is clear:
- From day 1 of being overdue, you can ask for a Time to Pay arrangement, usually through the Payment Support Service or online for smaller debts.
- If HMRC agrees a Time to Pay, and you stick to it, you may avoid some or all late payment penalties, although interest will still be charged.
Crucially, if you agree Time to Pay in the first 15 days, you can often prevent the first VAT penalties late payment charge from arising in the first place.
Build VAT into your regular finance rhythm
The businesses that avoid most VAT penalties tend to:
- Run regular management accounts so VAT due is visible well before the deadline.
- Use cloud tools (for example Xero) with accurate bank feeds and digital records.
- Ring fence VAT in a separate bank account as soon as it is collected, rather than treating it as working capital.
This is exactly the kind of rhythm we build into monthly and quarterly support for AGILE clients, so VAT is just another date in the diary, not a surprise.
What to do if you receive a VAT late payment penalty
Even with the best systems, things go wrong. If you receive a VAT late payment penalty notice:
Step 1 – check the dates and numbers
Log in to your VAT online account and:
- Check the VAT period, filing date, payment date and amount.
- Compare HMRC’s figures to your own records and bank statements.
Sometimes, payments that were made very close to the deadline have been allocated to the wrong period or delayed by banking cut off times.
Step 2 – consider whether you have a reasonable excuse
HMRC can reduce or cancel penalties if you have a reasonable excuse. Examples might include:
- Serious illness, bereavement or other major disruption.
- Systems failures outside your control, for example a problem with HMRC’s own online services.
Simply forgetting, being disorganised or having ongoing cash flow issues will not normally count as a reasonable excuse.
You can ask for a review of the penalty decision through your VAT online account, or appeal to the tax tribunal if needed.
Step 3 – fix the root cause
Whether or not HMRC reduces the penalty, use it as a prompt to improve your process:
- Tighten your internal VAT timetable and responsibilities.
- Improve forecasting and cash management.
- Review whether your accounting systems are giving you timely, accurate data.
How AGILE Accountants can help you stay out of the VAT penalty regime
Here at Agile Accountants, we regularly help directors and finance teams with:
- Reviewing historic VAT returns and payments to check exposure under the new penalty rules.
- Designing better VAT processes, from bookkeeping to management accounts and cash flow forecasting.
- Setting up cloud accounting and digital record keeping that support accurate, timely VAT reporting.
- Keeping you up to date as HMRC adjusts penalty percentages and interest rates in response to future Budgets and policy changes.
If you are worried about VAT penalties for late payment or late filing, or you have already received a penalty notice and are not sure what to do next, we can walk through your options and help you build a VAT process that is fit for a fast moving, modern business.
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