HMRC announces 10
HMRC to use AI from British tech firm to spot fraud and tax return errors
HM Revenue and Customs has announced a 10-year, £175m deal with the British tech firm Quantexa to provide AI-powered technology to help improve its performance.
Quantexa says its systems will combine data collected by HMRC with external sources to help the tax office identify incidents of fraud and fix unintentional errors more quickly.
Its tasks will include helping HMRC to assist customer service staff, as well as to identify hidden networks of companies and individuals masking fraudulent activity.
Public dissatisfaction with HMRC performance has crept up in recent years, according to government figures.
A Freedom of Information request made by the campaigners at the Contentious Tax Group found there were more than 93,000 complaints made about the department in 2024-2025.
This was an increase from just over 70,000 in 2020-21, with one of the main gripes about poor response times.
Quantexa says automated decisions about tax payers made by AI will still need to be checked by people.
Quantexa chief executive Vishal Marria told the BBC the new technology was designed to "support human decision-making, not replace it".
"In government environments, AI cannot operate as a black box. Decisions need to be transparent, auditable, and explainable, particularly in areas affecting citizens directly," he said.
He also said HMRC data would remain secure, and staff working with the government department would remain separate from the rest of the business.
"We never take HMRC data away from the HMRC environment," he added.
The company also said it will help in tracking down legitimate payments made to HMRC made under the wrong reference number.
The UK-based firm has been valued at $2.6bn (£1.9bn) and its corporate customers include HSBC and Vodafone.
The appointment of a British company is in line with the government's efforts to build what's known as "digital sovereignty".
There are concerns about the UK's dependence on platforms and services provided by big tech companies based in the US, including the controversial £330m contract awarded to the AI data processing firm Palantir to build a platform for the NHS.
Sign up for our Tech Decoded newsletter to follow the world's top tech stories and trends. Outside the UK? Sign up here.
Related Stories
AI News
G7 commits to ‘unwavering support for Ukraine’ with pledge to offer more air defence
3 days ago
AI News
IBM Study: Limited Control and Rising Dependencies Leave Enterprises Exposed in the Age of AI
3 days ago
AI News
du Launches AI
3 days ago
AI News
Anthropic's Fable shutdown is a big moment for open
3 days ago
AI News
The AGI moment? Databricks’ new releases zero in on support and deployment of AI agents
3 days ago
AI News
SpaceX overtakes Amazon as world’s fifth most valuable company
3 days ago
Army Innovators Automate Path to Zero Trust with Artificial Intelligence
3 days ago
AI News
Trump administration seeks to halt air pollution lawsuit against xAI
3 days ago