⚠ Late Filing Penalties Accumulate — And Can Lead to Prosecution
The IRD imposes fixed penalties under s.80 IRO for late or missing returns. Persistent failure to file can result in additional daily penalties, court summons, and ultimately criminal prosecution under s.80(2). Most late filing cases can be resolved through urgent filing and penalty negotiation — but time is of the essence.
Common Challenges
Missed Filing Deadlines
Missing the IRD's filing deadline for profits tax (BIR51), salaries tax (BIR60), or property tax (BIR57) triggers immediate penalty exposure under s.80 IRO.
⚠ Risk: Each missed return → HKD 10,000 fixed penalty + ongoing daily penalties
Multiple Years Outstanding
Some taxpayers have multiple years of outstanding returns — each year is a separate penalty exposure and the cumulative liability can be substantial.
⚠ Risk: 5 years outstanding returns → HKD 50,000+ penalty exposure plus estimated assessments
Court Summons Received
If the IRD has taken legal action for failure to file (issuing a court summons), the matter is more urgent — filing before the court date can significantly improve the outcome.
⚠ Risk: Appearing in court without returns filed → maximum penalties imposed
Estimated Assessments Raised
If you haven't filed, the IRD may have raised estimated assessments — typically much higher than your actual liability. Filing actual returns is the first step to correcting these.
⚠ Risk: Estimated assessment becomes final without objection → tax on fictional profits
Who Is This For?
Late profits tax filers
Companies and sole traders with overdue BIR51 or BIR52 profits tax returns.
Late salaries tax filers
Individuals with overdue BIR60 personal assessment or salaries tax returns.
Multiple years outstanding
Taxpayers who have not filed returns for 2+ years.
Court summons received
Taxpayers who have received IRD court summons for failure to file.
What We Do
Urgent Return Filing
File all outstanding tax returns as quickly as possible — 48-hour express service available for straightforward cases.
Same-day or next-day filing for urgent cases
Penalty Negotiation
Negotiate with the IRD to reduce late filing penalties, citing reasons for delay and full cooperation with current filing.
Penalty mitigation on late filing surcharges
Filing Compliance Programme
Establish ongoing filing compliance to prevent future late filing through a proactive annual tax calendar and reminder system.
Annual filing schedule and compliance monitoring
Estimated Assessment Objection
If the IRD has raised estimated assessments for unfiled years, file proper returns and formally object to the estimates.
Return filing and simultaneous objection to estimated assessments
How It Works
Urgent Assessment
Same dayImmediate review of outstanding returns, penalties incurred, and any court action.
Return Preparation & Filing
48 hours – 2 weeksPrepare and file all outstanding returns as quickly as possible.
Penalty Negotiation
2-4 weeksNegotiate with IRD to reduce accumulated late filing penalties.
Compliance Programme
OngoingSet up ongoing compliance monitoring to prevent future late filing.
Case Studies
Restaurant owner — 4 years outstanding returns
- •4 years BIR51 outstanding
- •IRD had raised estimated assessments at HKD 1.8M
- •All 4 returns filed within 2 weeks
- •Actual profits: HKD 680K — assessments corrected
- •Penalty reduced to HKD 15,000 total
“Fast, professional, and they saved us from a HKD 1.8M estimated assessment.”
Individual — 3 years BIR60 overdue
- •Court summons received for non-filing
- •All 3 returns filed within 48 hours of engagement
- •Court hearing attended with returns in hand
- •Penalty: HKD 3,000 per return — vs HKD 10,000 maximum
“They worked incredibly fast. Having the returns filed for the court date made all the difference.”
Frequently Asked Questions
What penalties apply for late filing of tax returns in Hong Kong?
Under s.80 of the IRO: (1) Fixed penalty of up to HKD 10,000 per return for failure to file by the deadline; (2) If non-compliance continues after the penalty, the IRD can apply to the Court for a further daily penalty; (3) Repeated or wilful failure to file can result in criminal prosecution under s.80(2) — a fine of up to HKD 50,000 and 3 years' imprisonment. Additionally, the IRD may raise estimated assessments under s.59 based on its best estimate of income.
Can late filing penalties be reduced if I file the return now?
Yes. Filing the return promptly, with a good explanation for the delay (health issues, disaster, genuine unavoidable circumstances), provides the best basis for penalty reduction. The IRD considers: the reason for delay; cooperation since the default; history of compliance; and whether the delay caused prejudice to the IRD. First-time defaults with genuine explanations often receive significant penalty reduction. Penalties can sometimes be waived entirely for minor delays with good reasons.
I have 5 years of outstanding returns — where do I start?
Start with the most recent years and work backwards — this gets you into current compliance quickly, reduces ongoing penalty accumulation, and demonstrates good faith to the IRD. Gather all financial records for each outstanding year. If records are incomplete, we work with available information to prepare reasonable best-estimate returns. File all outstanding returns simultaneously if possible — this shows comprehensive remediation. Our team has extensive experience reconstructing records for multi-year late filing cases.
What should I do if I've received an IRD court summons for non-filing?
Act immediately. Filing the outstanding return(s) before the court hearing demonstrates that you have taken remedial action and typically leads to significantly lower penalties being imposed at court. Appearing at court without filing is the worst outcome. Contact us immediately upon receipt of a summons — we can often prepare and file returns within 48 hours for straightforward cases. We can also prepare a written explanation to the court setting out the circumstances and remedial actions taken.
Can the IRD prosecute me for not filing a tax return?
Yes — under s.80(2) of the IRO, wilful failure to file a tax return is a criminal offence punishable by a fine of up to HKD 50,000 plus 3 times the tax undercharged, and imprisonment of up to 3 years. However, prosecution is reserved for the most serious cases of persistent, wilful non-compliance — typically involving deliberate evasion. Taxpayers who come forward proactively, file outstanding returns, and cooperate with the IRD are extremely unlikely to face prosecution.
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