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Jurisdiction(s):
United Kingdom
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Key definition
Costs definition

What does Costs mean? In litigation, costs are the legal fees, disbursements, court fees and VAT incurred in bringing, defending or appealing a claim, and the sums a court or tribunal may order one party to pay another for those liabilities. The concept is governed by procedural rules and case law rather than a single statutory definition: England and Wales (CPR 44–47), Northern Ireland (RCJ Ord 62), Scotland (where the equivalent term is expenses), and Ireland (Legal Services Regulation Act 2015 and the Legal Costs Adjudicators). The general approach is broadly consistent, subject to local terminology and procedure. Typical features include the discretionary rule...

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Appeals to the UK First-tier Tribunal (Tax Chamber) against HMRC: payment, merits, procedural pitfalls, potential assessment increases, confidentiality and privacy

Published by a LexisNexis Tax expert
Practice notes
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This Practice Note

This Practice Note was prepared by Anne Redston, Barrister. It expresses her personal views; she is not authorised to speak for the Tribunals Service or the judiciary. Before you read this Practice Note, you should read Practice Note: Appealing an HMRC decision. You are also encouraged to consider whether an HMRC review is appropriate; see Practice Note: HMRC review of a decision.

The Note highlights the main matters to raise with your client when deciding whether to pursue an appeal to the First-tier Tax Tribunal (FTT). It addresses:

  • payment of the tax that is in dispute
  • the merits and prospects of the case
  • matters concerning privacy and Confidentiality

You should also reflect on the likely Costs position. Further guidance on costs can be found in Practice Note: Costs in the First-tier Tax Tribunal (FTT).

This Practice Note, and the related Notes on appeals to the FTT, provide only a summary and do not deal with every scenario. You may need to obtain additional advice tailored to your client’s appeal position...

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Anne Redston
Anne Redston

Anne Redston is consultant editor of Tolley’s Yellow Tax Handbook and a judge of the Upper Tribunal (Tax and Chancery Chamber) and of the First-tier Tribunal sitting in the Tax and Social Entitlement Chambers. Her contributions to TolleyGuidance and LexisPSL Tax are her personal view as she is not authorised to write on behalf of the Tribunals Service or the judiciary. Anne was until 2021 a tenant at Temple Tax Chambers from where she practised as a barrister, advising on a wide range of tax issues including employment and personal tax, VAT, social security and customs duties. As well as being a barrister, she is a Chartered Accountant and Chartered Tax Adviser, and a Fellow of both Institutes....

Web page updated on 21/05/2026

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