May 15
If your employees are getting unexpected tax codes, duplicated employment records or unexplained HMRC messages, a payroll ID mismatch is one possible cause. HMRC uses payroll IDs as part of the Real Time Information (RTI) matching process, and even a small inconsistency can lead to duplicate employment records, incorrect year-to-date figures and avoidable PAYE queries.
Catching these issues before HMRC flags them is far cheaper and far less stressful than dealing with the consequences after the fact.
Whether you run a small team or manage payroll across several sites, the good news is that a straightforward review of your payroll records can usually identify and fix many of these problems quickly. Working with experienced accountants armagh and across Northern Ireland gives you access to a team that understands what HMRC looks for and how to put things right.
A payroll ID is the unique employee reference used in your payroll records and submitted to HMRC as part of your Full Payment Submission (FPS). Employers can assign payroll IDs to employees, and the ID should be unique within the PAYE scheme.
HMRC uses the payroll ID alongside other employee details, including the employee’s National Insurance number, name, date of birth and pay data, to match incoming RTI submissions to the correct employment record.
If the payroll ID changes without the correct payroll ID change indicator being used, or if the old payroll ID is not supplied when required, HMRC may treat the submission as a new employment. This can lead to problems including:
These are not just minor administrative nuisances. They can affect how much tax your employees pay, how cleanly your payroll records reconcile, and how much time your business spends dealing with HMRC queries.
For businesses with cross-border payroll arrangements across the UK and Ireland, the risks are even more pronounced because you are managing separate employer reporting systems at the same time.
Most PAYE errors do not come from carelessness. They happen because of ordinary business events that the payroll team simply did not know they needed to flag.
The most common triggers include:
HMRC guidance is clear that payroll IDs should be unique. If a payroll ID changes, the payroll ID changed indicator should be used and both the old and new payroll IDs should be supplied. If you reuse a previous payroll ID incorrectly, HMRC can duplicate or misalign records.
That last point is particularly important during business change. When employees move between businesses as part of a merger, acquisition or restructure, payroll records need to be carefully carried across. Our team that advises on recovery accounts UK regularly helps businesses navigate these transitions and avoid creating payroll problems in the process. You can also read more about what an insolvency accountant does in business distress cases to understand the broader context of what can go wrong during periods of business change.
The table below covers some of the most frequently seen PAYE errors, what usually causes them, and what the typical outcome can be if they are not caught.
| PAYE Error | Common Cause | Likely Consequence |
|---|---|---|
| Mismatched payroll ID | System migration or format change | Duplicate employment record, incorrect year-to-date figures or tax code issue |
| Late or missing RTI submission | Software issue or process gap | Monthly penalties from £100, depending on employee numbers |
| Wrong National Insurance number recorded | Manual data entry error | HMRC matching issues and employee record discrepancies |
| Incorrect starter declaration | Missing P45 or starter checklist error | Emergency or incorrect tax code applied |
| P45 not issued on leaving | Payroll leaver process not followed | Employee may have problems in their next employment |
| Wrong National Insurance category | Category not updated when circumstances change | Underpayment or overpayment of contributions |
| Employee reported under the wrong PAYE scheme | Acquisition, restructure or scheme confusion | Split employment history and PAYE reconciliation issues |
If you recognise any of these in your own payroll, an independent review from your accountant or a specialist in tax compliance is a sensible next step.
Before RTI was introduced, PAYE errors were often identified at year end. Now employers normally submit payroll data on or before every pay date, so a recurring error can be filed repeatedly before anyone realises what has happened.
This is a particular concern for businesses that have recently changed payroll software, moved to cloud accounting, or adopted new systems as part of wider Making Tax Digital planning. Integration errors between your accounting software and your payroll platform can produce incorrect RTI submissions without triggering any obvious warning in the software itself.
If you use digital bookkeeping tools that connect to your payroll, it is worth confirming that the data flowing between systems is correctly mapped, particularly employee identifiers, pay reference fields and year-to-date figures. A mismatch at the integration point can silently affect what HMRC receives for months.
For a broader look at how software and automation are reshaping tax compliance, our piece on how AI is changing the accountancy profession is worth a read.
If HMRC identifies inconsistencies in your RTI submissions, you may receive one of the following:
The financial penalties for late in-year RTI submissions depend on the size of your payroll scheme. For employers with 1 to 9 employees, the monthly penalty is £100. For 10 to 49 employees it is £200, rising to £300 for 50 to 249 employees and £400 for 250 or more.
There are some important exceptions. HMRC will not usually charge a penalty if your FPS is late but all reported payments are within 3 days of the employees’ payday, although repeated late filing can still be challenged. New employers also have a short first-FPS easement, and the first late filing failure in a tax year is normally not penalised unless the employer is an annual scheme.
Interest and late payment penalties can also apply where PAYE or National Insurance is paid late. Late monthly or quarterly PAYE payment penalties are based on the number of defaults in the tax year, and additional 5% penalties can apply if amounts remain unpaid after 6 months and 12 months.
Beyond the direct financial cost, there is also the time and disruption involved in responding to HMRC, correcting historical submissions, and managing employees who have received unexpected tax codes. A member of staff who has been overtaxed for several months is not going to be particularly understanding about an avoidable payroll issue.
Our about us page gives a good overview of the proactive approach SCC Chartered Accountants takes to helping businesses stay ahead of exactly these kinds of compliance issues.
If you want to check your own records, here is a practical starting point:
If you use a third-party payroll bureau, ask them to confirm that they carry out regular reconciliations and have a process for managing payroll ID changes during software migrations.
If you are looking for guidance on the value a good accountant brings to this process, our article on how tax accountants help small businesses explains it well.
For broader context on how payroll compliance fits into your wider tax obligations, you may also find our guides on self-assessment tax returns for the self-employed and capital allowances and how they reduce your tax bill useful reading.
If your business employs staff across Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, or operates payroll schemes in both jurisdictions, the complexity increases significantly. You are managing UK PAYE and RTI obligations alongside Irish PAYE, PRSI, USC and Revenue reporting requirements. These systems are separate, but your internal payroll records still need to be consistent and properly reconciled.
In these situations, a payroll ID or employee reference issue in one jurisdiction can create wider internal reporting problems, particularly where employees split their working time, move between group entities, or have contracts involving cross-border arrangements. Our cross-border tax advisory service is designed specifically for businesses in this position.
Our article on setting up a company in both the UK and Ireland covers the key accounting and tax considerations from the outset, including payroll structure. You might also find our articles on VAT compliance for businesses operating across the UK-Ireland border and UK tax rules for individuals with income in multiple countries helpful if you are managing a cross-border workforce.
For payroll and financial planning that needs to work across both systems, our piece on the future of financial planning and why integration matters sets out why a joined-up approach is so important.
Most payroll ID errors are administrative mistakes with a straightforward fix. But in some cases, a pattern of errors, particularly one that has persisted undetected over several years, can attract more serious HMRC scrutiny.
If HMRC believes the errors reflect a broader control failure, or if the underpayment of PAYE and National Insurance is significant, you could be looking at a formal review rather than a simple correction process. If the errors were careless or deliberate, penalties may be considered in addition to the tax and interest due.
In more serious cases, where errors overlap with suspected financial irregularities, the involvement of forensics accountants may be necessary to establish a clear picture of what happened and produce a documented audit trail.
Our articles on forensic accounting vs audit, how forensic accounting helps in fraud investigations, and red flags of financial fraud in SMEs cover these situations in more detail and will help you understand when more specialist input is needed.
If wider financial pressures are involved and the business needs to look at its overall stability, our article on how recovery accountants improve cash flow is a useful starting point, and our team also covers due diligence and its importance in business for situations where a transaction or restructure is on the table.
The right correction route depends on the type of error and the tax year involved. For current-year pay or deduction errors, you will usually correct the year-to-date figures in your next FPS. For some previous-year errors from 6 April 2020 onwards, an additional FPS with the corrected year-to-date figures may be needed.
If the issue relates to employee start dates, leaving dates, personal information or a payroll ID change, you need to be especially careful. Reporting the wrong correction in the wrong place can create further duplicate records.
Where a payroll ID has changed, the key points are:
If the problem has already created duplicate employment records in HMRC’s systems, you may need to contact HMRC after correcting the payroll submission. It is sensible to get advice before making multiple corrections, because repeated FPS amendments without a clear plan can make the record harder to untangle.
HMRC updates employer guidance, RTI data item guidance and payroll specifications regularly. The PAYE processes that applied several years ago are not always the same as those that apply today, and payroll software providers do not always communicate every practical change clearly.
Keeping up with changes via our news and insights section is one way to stay informed. Our article on Making Tax Digital for UK and Irish businesses explains the direction HMRC is heading in with digital reporting, and our resources section has additional tools for business owners.
For those with more complex tax positions, our specialist tax team covers R&D tax credits, capital allowances and patent box relief. Our article on R&D tax credits in the UK and Ireland is a good entry point if you think your business may be eligible.
If you are also thinking about the bigger picture of business ownership, including plans for sale or succession, our articles on protecting the family business, how to prepare your business for sale, and the role of external audit in building lender confidence are all worth reading alongside your payroll review.
For businesses considering expansion, our guide on tax planning for UK businesses expanding overseas covers the implications for your employer obligations in new jurisdictions.
A payroll ID is the unique employee reference used in payroll records and submitted to HMRC through RTI. HMRC uses it alongside other employee details to match payroll submissions to the correct employment record. If it changes unexpectedly or is reused incorrectly, HMRC may create duplicate records or misalign year-to-date figures.
Common signs include employees contacting you about unexpected tax code changes, GNS messages from HMRC, duplicate employment records, discrepancies between your payroll reports and PAYE online account, or year-to-date figures that do not reconcile. A payroll reconciliation is the most reliable way to catch these early.
The mismatch itself does not automatically create a fine. However, the RTI problems it causes can lead to penalties if submissions are late, missing, careless or incorrect. Late in-year RTI filing penalties start at £100 per month for employers with 1 to 9 employees and increase based on scheme size.
Do not keep submitting changes without a clear correction plan. You may need to correct year-to-date figures through an FPS, use the payroll ID changed indicator properly, provide the old and new payroll IDs, or contact HMRC if duplicate employment records have already been created. Getting advice from an experienced payroll accountant before you start the correction process will help you avoid making things more complicated.
Yes. PAYE and RTI obligations apply to all employers regardless of size. Small businesses are just as exposed to payroll ID errors and often have fewer internal checks in place to catch them.
As a minimum, carry out a full reconciliation at year end before issuing P60s. A mid-year check is also worthwhile, especially if you have changed payroll systems, taken on new employees, had staff leave and rejoin, or had employees transfer across from another employer.
In that case, the payroll review is just one part of a broader picture. Our SME business solutions team can look at the full financial position and help you prioritise where to focus first.
Payroll ID errors are the kind of issue that sits quietly in the background until they become genuinely costly. If you have not reviewed your PAYE records recently, or if you have recently changed payroll software, taken on new staff, or gone through any kind of business restructure, now is the right time to carry out that check.
Our team of chartered accountants northern ireland works with employers across Northern Ireland, the Republic of Ireland and the wider UK to identify payroll compliance gaps before they attract HMRC attention. We take a proactive approach and move quickly, because the sooner a problem is identified, the easier and cheaper it is to fix.
To speak with one of our team about your payroll position, get in touch today.
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