The tax gap estimate was 5.3% for the  2023/24 tax year, according to the latest data from HMRC.
The tax gap is the difference between  what tax is expected to be paid and actually paid.
HMRC collected £829.2 billion in the  2023/24 tax year representing 94.7% of all tax due, leaving £46.8 billion  unpaid.
However, HMRC revised the figures upwards  for 2022/23, from 4.8% (£39.8 billion) to 5.6% (£46.4 billion). It also warned  that the latest figures may be revised as more data becomes available.
Some of the key findings from this year's  calculations show:
    - Small  businesses represent the largest proportion of the tax gap (60%).
 
    - Corporation  Tax accounts for 40% of the total tax gap.
 
    - Failure to  take reasonable care (31%), error (15%) and evasion (14%) are among the main  behavioural reasons for the overall tax gap.
 
Ellen Milner, Director of Public Policy,  said:
'These  figures show the stubbornness of the tax gap and how optimistic the  government's target of a £7.5 billion reduction by 2029/30 is.
'While  large businesses and wealthy individuals are often accused of not paying enough  tax these figures suggest that their total share of the tax gap is not much  more than a quarter of that of small businesses.
'The  small business figures reflect big upward revisions from HMRC a year ago as a  result of a random enquiry programme carried out in 2020/21, which identified  greater inaccuracy and non-compliance than previously forecast.'
Internet  link: HMRC press release CIOT
					
					
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