Investment has also been provided to modernise IT and data systems to improve HMRC’s productivity and improve taxpayers’ experience of dealing with the tax system.
Key to this is encouraging more taxpayers to use HMRC’s app. Sir Jim confirmed that last year the HMRC App had 3.8 million users, who used the app a combined 88 million times. This represented a 64 percent increase compared to the previous year. As of today the app has over 4 million users and HMRC are currently running a campaign to promote the app to 18 to 34 year olds.
Sir Jim confirmed that while HMRC had increased the number of telephone agents, telephony operations are being scaled back as two-thirds of calls received by HMRC telephone advisors could have been resolved digitally. 86 percent of customers are willing to engage with digital methods, although Sir Jim accepted that this statistic drops significantly when issues were more complex or if customers encountered problems. He stressed that although customers first stop should be digital self-service, there will be a telephone adviser available if customers cannot resolve their issues digitally.
Sir Jim noted that Making Tax Digital (MTD) for VAT has proved effective, with millions of VAT returns being processed and good feedback received from customers. There is also evidence that the system is reducing VAT errors. The next phase is MTD for Income Tax, which is currently being user tested and will be mandated for customers in tranches beginning in April 2026. Sir Jim noted that this is later than HMRC would have liked, but that implementing MTD for Income Tax is far more challenging than for VAT because of the different population of taxpayers.
Sir Jim acknowledged that the greater digitisation of HMRC increases the risks associated with cyber-attacks from hostile actors. HMRC are constantly looking at how they can best use the financial investment they have been given, not only to close the tax gap, but to make their IT estate more resilient to potential threats. While progress is being made, and no cyber-attacks have successfully defrauded HMRC, Sir Jim described this as a ‘never-ending battle’.