Taxpayer uses AI to argue against penalty
One taxpayer recently decided to use AI to generate a defence against an HMRC penalty. How did things turn out for her?
Mrs Harber (H) received a penalty from HMRC for failing to notify a capital gains tax liability. She appealed to the First-tier Tribunal on the grounds that she had a “reasonable excuse”; namely that her mental health was poor. What made the appeal interesting was that H used an AI application, similar to ChatGPT, to produce a list of previous cases where an argument of a reasonable excuse due to mental health was accepted.
Upon review of the cases presented by H, the judge found a large number of discrepancies. It turned out that the application had more or less invented the cases, though there were occasional hallmarks of actual decisions present. None of the cases could be located, and the one that had “some” similarity to a real case had the wrong year, which was a case that the taxpayer had lost. The tribunal accepted that H did not know the cases had been created by the application, so there was no question of her trying to mislead deliberately. The case should serve as some relief that the robots aren’t ready to take over just yet!
After all that, the actual decision itself seems relatively boring. H did not convince the tribunal that she had a reasonable excuse for not notifying HMRC of her liability. There would have been nothing to stop her seeking advice from a (human!) tax advisor.
Related Topics
-
Who can't yet sign up for MTD IT?
Making Tax Digital for Income Tax (MTD IT) becomes mandatory from April 2026 for sole traders and landlords with qualifying income over £50,000. However, HMRC’s current guidance makes clear that not everyone can sign up yet. If you are preparing early, are you actually eligible?
-
MONTHLY FOCUS - PROFIT EXTRACTION PLANNING AHEAD OF 5 APRIL 2026
The end of the 2025/26 tax year is fast approaching. In this Monthly Focus we look at ways to get money out of your company tax efficiently, and consider whether limited is still the way to go for your business.
-
HMRC updates advisory fuel rates from 1 March 2026
HMRC has published the latest advisory fuel and electric rates (AFRs) for company cars, effective from 1 March 2026. Several rates have changed since the previous quarter. What should employers be aware of?

This website uses both its own and third-party cookies to analyze our services and navigation on our website in order to improve its contents (analytical purposes: measure visits and sources of web traffic). The legal basis is the consent of the user, except in the case of basic cookies, which are essential to navigate this website.