Here are the latest updates I can share based on recent reporting up to May 2026.
-
What happened: HMRC has been facing ongoing issues with automated savings income data, leading to incorrect tax codes and bills for some savers. In several high-profile notices, savers were told to check their tax bills because their savings interest was not being treated correctly or was being miscalculated, sometimes resulting in overpayments. These problems trace back to data feeds from banks and the automatic adjustment of tax codes based on those figures.[2][3]
-
Current state: HMRC has acknowledged that errors occur in a portion of cases each year and has urged those affected to contact HMRC to correct mistaken tax codes. In recent coverage, the focus has been on incorrect or double-counted interest and misclassification of cash ISA interest as taxable income, with some taxpayers receiving incorrect demands for payment. The Telegraph and other outlets noted ongoing corrective actions and the need for banks to provide accurate data to HMRC to avoid over- or under-collection.[3][2]
-
Notable timelines:
- 2024: Early reports identified thousands of savers being overcharged due to a system quirk, with HMRC admitting the issue and urging checks on tax bills.[3]
- 2025–2026: Media investigations highlighted continued problems arising from the 2016 data-sharing framework between banks and HMRC, with millions affected by incorrect savings tax calculations over multiple years. The coverage emphasized cases where the calculated savings income did not match reality, sometimes resulting in large overpayments or incorrect tax-code changes.[4][2]
-
Practical steps for savers (general guidance, not legal advice):
- Review your latest HMRC tax codes and your savings income details. If your interest appears miscalculated or if you’ve received unexpected tax demands, contact HMRC to challenge or correct the code. The HMRC position has consistently been to verify and correct data when errors are found.[2]
- If you have a cash ISA or other tax-advantaged accounts, double-check that ISA interest is treated as tax-free where appropriate and not counted as taxable savings income by HMRC data feeds.[2]
- Keep documentation from banks showing your interest statements and any HMRC correspondence. HMRC indicates it updates tax codes based on the most recent data from banks, and corrections should be possible when supplied with accurate figures.[2]
-
Public and political context:
- The savings tax issue has been a recurring topic in UK financial press, with opposition and financial commentators calling for improved data accuracy and faster corrections when errors are found. Coverage has repeatedly highlighted the friction between automatic data collection and the need for accurate individual tax calculations.[3][2]
Would you like me to:
- Pull the very latest official HMRC guidance or statements about savings tax codes and any active fixes, and summarize them with direct quotes?
- Map how your own savings situation could be affected (e.g., if you hold cash savings vs ISAs) and outline the steps to verify your tax code and potential refunds?
- Set up a quick checklist to monitor your HMRC communications over the next few weeks?