Obsession With Weather Forecast..
Jokes4 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Big Jenny. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'm sorry your son has been struggling, but if he's old enough to be self employed and live away from home, he's surely old enough not to rely on his mother to still do everything for him. Unfortunately I don't think the Revenue will necessarily accept payment by instalments. They're even less accommodating than the banks when money is owed. I suggest you get your son to write to them, explain the situation and ask what payments they will accept. Don't do it for him. He's old enough now to take responsibility for himself. Just think what a rod for the back you are making for his future wife or partner if he thinks it's always OK to rely on somebody else to do his dirty work for him. If you really want to help him out I suppose you could loan him the money yourself if you have it, but make sure he pays it back every month and doesn't just treat you as a soft touch. Taxes are sadly a fact of life for everybody and one of the first lessons of being an adult is that you have to face up to paying them on time.
They are not exactly going to be sympathetic (not to the extent of waiving any interest, etc, due anyway) but they will accept the situation:
http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/howtopay/prob-indiv-comp.htm
Is he paying his national insurance at the same time? I thought that was quarterly but ICBW.