With the 31 January deadline approaching, thousands of taxpayers are using HMRC’s Time to Pay service to spread the cost of their self-assessment tax bill rather than facing immediate payment pressure.

HMRC has reported that thousands of people have set up payment plans to help spread the cost of their self-assessment tax bill. Taxpayers with outstanding tax liabilities, may be eligible to receive support with their tax affairs through HMRC’s ‘Time to Pay’ service. Almost 18,000 self-assessment payment plans were set up between 06 April 2025 and 30 November 2025. The deadline to file and pay any tax owed for the 2024-25 tax year is 31 January 2026.

If you owe tax to HMRC, you may be able to set up an online ‘Time to Pay’ payment plan depending on the type of tax debt and your circumstances. For self-assessment, you can create a payment plan online if you’ve filed your latest tax return, owe £30,000 or less, are within 60 days of the deadline and have no other debts or payment plans with HMRC.

A Time to Pay arrangement cannot be set up until a self-assessment return has been filed. If the tax owed is more than £30,000, or a longer repayment period is needed, people can still apply but will need to contact HMRC directly. HMRC will typically ask for details about your income, expenses, other tax liabilities, and any savings or assets, which they may expect you to use toward your debt.

HMRC will usually only offer taxpayers the option of extra time to pay if they think they genuinely cannot pay in full now but will be able to pay in the future. If HMRC do not think that more time will help, then they can require immediate payment of a tax bill and start enforcement action if payment is not forthcoming.