HMRC has admitted for the first time that it uses artificial intelligence (AI) to monitor taxpayers’ social media accounts as part of criminal investigations into tax fraud.
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Tax Tactics: AI Gets a Helping Hand
HMRC’s newly‑ish AI tools are now mingling with good old‑fashioned human checks to sift through what people post online. Think Instagram jet‑liners, Instagram restaurants and even TikTok buy‑tots that don’t line up with the money folks declare on their returns.
Why the AI Gums Up Posts
When a post about a pricey vacay or a new car pops up that looks out of sync with a taxpayer’s reported earnings, the AI bats an eye. If something looks fishy, it flags it – but only if a legal case is hanging in the balance.
What the Taxmen Say
- “Robust safeguards in place… only on criminal cases.”
- “Humans always have the final say.”
But… The Fears Are Real
In Westminster, some MPs are all about it: “Automated tools can screw up if they bite.”
Majoring Voices
- Bob Blackman MP: “If they take legal action without a human check, it’s draconian. There’ll be problems.”
- Sir John Hayes: “Remember the Post Office Horizon fiasco? Machines get it wrong. I’m a big AI sceptic.”
AI, Connect & the ‘Everyday’ Tax Shuffle
These new tools sit alongside Connect – HMRC’s decade‑old data‑analysis engine that cross‑checks billions of points, from bank transfers to housing records.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves has the aim of clawing back £7 billion from a £47 billion “tax gap.” HMRC’s latest strategy says AI will be a staple across everyday tax jobs.
How AI Helps the Public
They’re testing AI “assistants” to help people complete returns and aid compliance officers. If a return looks fishy, the system may issue a warning that could become evidence later on.
What’s the Rule‑Book on AI?
After a tribunal decision demanded HMRC reveal AI’s role in R&D tax credits, the whole thing got even more interesting. A Freedom of Information request from tax expert Tom Elsbury sparked speculation that AI might already be nudging claim outcomes.
Final Words
Ministers insist a human “in‑the‑loop” always manages the final call. HMRC emphasizes that the silent AI sidekick is not the boss.
From Job‑Help to Tax‑Busters
The Department for Work and Pensions also trialled AI, with 20,000 civil servants using it to draft documents and summarise meetings. Meanwhile HMRC is courting about a dozen tech firms to tackle the £46.8 billion in unpaid tax – mostly tied to offshore accounts.
Why the AI Is Just the Sidekick
- “Social media monitoring is for criminal investigations only and under legal oversight.”
- “AI supports our processes, has safeguards, and does not replace human decision‑making.”
So the big takeaway? AI will let staff skip the admin grind, freedom up for taxpayers, and give the tax system a sharper eye on fraud. Yet, it comes with a solid disclaimer: humanity still leads the ship.
