Why is my tax bill higher than expected? Lucy Cohen 27 February 2026 14:09 Updated This is one of the most common questions business owners ask.In most cases, a higher than expected tax bill is not a mistake. It is usually caused by one of the reasons below.1. Payments on accountThe most common reason is payments on account.In your second year of trading, you may have to pay:The tax for the previous yearPlus advance payments towards the current yearThis can make your January bill much larger than the profit from one year alone would suggest.If you were not expecting the advance payments, the total can come as a shock.2. Profit is higher than you realisedTax is based on profit, not turnover and not cash in the bank.Profit is:IncomeMinus allowable business expensesIf your income increased, or your expenses were lower than expected, your profit may be higher than you thought.Higher profit means higher tax.3. You have moved into a higher tax bandAs your profits grow, more of your income may fall into higher rate tax bands.This means:A larger portion of your income is taxed at a higher percentageYour overall tax bill increases faster than your profit4. You did not set money aside during the yearTax is usually paid months after the profit was earned.If money was spent rather than set aside, the bill can feel larger because the funds are no longer available.This is a cash flow issue rather than a calculation issue.5. Benefits, dividends or other incomeYour tax position includes all taxable income, not just business profit.This can include:Employment incomeDividendsRental incomeBenefits in kindWhen combined, this may push you into higher tax bands.6. Loss of allowancesIf income increases beyond certain thresholds, you may:Lose part of your Personal AllowancePay higher dividend taxTrigger other tax changesThis can increase your effective tax rate.7. Underpaid tax from a previous yearSometimes HMRC adjusts your tax bill to collect underpaid tax from an earlier year.This can increase the current amount due.How to avoid surprisesTo reduce unexpected tax bills:Set aside a percentage of profit regularlyKeep track of your profit, not just your bank balanceUnderstand how payments on account workPlan ahead if profits are increasing Related to tax taxreturn taxbill