Policy paper

The HSS Appeals (Tax Exemptions and Relief) Regulations 2025

Published 4 April 2025

Who is likely to be affected

Postmasters entitled to or in receipt of compensation payments made under the Horizon Shortfall Scheme (HSS) Appeals process.

General description of the measure

This measure exempts payments made under the HSS Appeals process from Income Tax, National Insurance contributions, Capital Gains Tax and Corporation Tax. It also relieves payments from Inheritance Tax.

Policy objective

The policy objective of this measure is to ensure compensation payments made to postmasters under the HSS Appeals process are exempt from:

  • Income Tax
  • National Insurance contributions
  • Capital Gains Tax
  • Corporation Tax

This Statutory Instrument also relieves payments in the HSS Appeals process from Inheritance Tax.

Background to the measure

This measure was announced in a on 13 March 2025, confirming the tax treatment of payments made under the HSS Appeals process such as they would be exempt from:

  • Income Tax
  • National Insurance contributions
  • Capital Gains Tax
  • Corporation Tax

This Statutory Instrument also relieves payments in the HSS Appeals process from Inheritance Tax.

The Department for Business and Trade established an independent appeals process (鈥�HSS Appeals鈥�) to ensure eligible postmasters affected by the Horizon scandal, where accounting software errors resulted in the Post Office incorrectly taking punitive action against postmasters, are able to make an appeal and are put back to the tax position they would have been in had the issue not occurred. This is in addition to the current dispute resolution process that is managed by Post Office Limited.

Postmasters who wish to make a claim will be given the option of pursuing their claim via the existing process, managed by Post Office Limited, or the new Department for Business and Trade process. Those who are already pursuing a claim with Post Office Limited will be given the option to continue pursuing this through Post Office Limited, or switch to HSS Appeals, administered by the Department for Business and Trade.

Detailed proposal

Operative date

The measure will have effect on 28 April 2025.

Current law

Payments made under the HSS Appeals process could be subject to Income Tax, National Insurance contributions, Capital Gains Tax, Corporation Tax and Inheritance Tax.

Schedule 15 of the Finance Act 2020 provides a power for HM Treasury to introduce secondary legislation through regulations to relieve qualifying compensation payments from tax.

Proposed revisions

There are no proposed changes to primary legislation and this measure exempts compensation payments from Income Tax, Capital Gains Tax, Corporation Tax and provides relief from Inheritance Tax, enabled by paragraph 2(5) of Part 1 and paragraph 7(1)(e) of Part 2 of Schedule 15 to the Finance Act 2020.

Part 10 of Schedule 3 to the Social Security (Contributions) Regulations 2001 is amended by the insertion of a new paragraph after paragraph 31 to disregard the payments from Class 1 National Insurance contributions.

Summary of impacts

Exchequer impact (拢 million)

2024 to 2025 2025 to 2026 2026 to 2027 2027 to 2028 2028 to 2029 2029 to 2030
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The exchequer impact for this measure is set out as part of 鈥楥ompensation Payments: Making payments to victims of the Horizon IT scandal鈥� in Table 5.1 of Autumn Budget 2024 and have been certified by the Office for Budget Responsibility. More details can be found in the policy costings document published alongside Autumn Budget 2024.

Economic impact

This measure is not expected to have any significant macroeconomic impacts.聽

Impact on individuals, households and families

Individuals will not need to do anything differently as the exemption will be automatically applied to payments, made by the Department for Business and Trade, under the HSS Appeals scheme. The measures are expected overall to have no impact on individuals鈥� experience of dealing with HMRC. No impact is expected on family formation, stability or breakdown.聽聽聽

Equalities impacts

It is not anticipated that there will be negative impacts on those in groups sharing protected characteristics.聽聽

Impact on business including civil society organisations

There is no impact on business as these measures only affect individuals.聽

Operational impact (拢 million) (HMRC or other)

There are no operational impacts on HMRC. The Department for Business and Trade are expected to manage the administration of the schemes.聽

Other impacts

Other impacts have been considered and none have been identified.聽

Monitoring and evaluation

The measure will be kept under review through communication with affected taxpayer groups.聽

Further advice

If you have any questions about this change, contact Amir Miah or the Employment Income Policy team by email, at: [email protected].听听听听听

Declaration

James Murray MP, Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury has read this tax information and impact note and is satisfied that, given the available evidence, it represents a reasonable view of the likely costs, benefits and impacts of the measure.