ChatterBank47 mins ago
Should I throw away my statements?
16 Answers
I have current account statements as well as credit card statements at home since I opened my account 9 years ago. Im thinking of throwing them away and just keeping the last 12 months or so. Is this a wise idea?
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Thank you all for your answers. Yes, I always use a shredder for bank statements, transaction slips, address on envelopes etc. I am not self employed or in business so does this mean that there is no reason for the taxman to ask me for the last 7 years worth of statements? Some of you are saying that I should keep 6/7 years of them and others that one year is enough.
Thank you all for your answers. Yes, I always use a shredder for bank statements, transaction slips, address on envelopes etc. I am not self employed or in business so does this mean that there is no reason for the taxman to ask me for the last 7 years worth of statements? Some of you are saying that I should keep 6/7 years of them and others that one year is enough.
Whether you are in business or not is technically irrelevant. As a British taxpayer you are required to keep records for 6 years (which in practice means 7 years) in case the Revenue wish to look into your affairs.
In practice of course if you only pay tax on PAYE there's absolutely no reason the revenue would ever want to look at your records and you would be perfectly safe to destroy them and never be asked for them in 9,999 cases out of 10,000. If by some sheer chance they did though you could be prosecuted for not keeping the records and would be unable to defend yourself against suggestions you had untaxed income in earlier years.
It's up to you, on your own head be it if you destroy records within 6 years.
In practice of course if you only pay tax on PAYE there's absolutely no reason the revenue would ever want to look at your records and you would be perfectly safe to destroy them and never be asked for them in 9,999 cases out of 10,000. If by some sheer chance they did though you could be prosecuted for not keeping the records and would be unable to defend yourself against suggestions you had untaxed income in earlier years.
It's up to you, on your own head be it if you destroy records within 6 years.
Trouble is BOO - if they're tucked away in the archives, trying to get a bank to supply you with copies of statements, can be like trying to get blood out of a stone!
I've never had to do it, but know of people who have & it was very frustrating for them.
Also depends on which bank you use of course!
I've never had to do it, but know of people who have & it was very frustrating for them.
Also depends on which bank you use of course!
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