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P800 Refund

Independent UK guidance for P800 refunds and HMRC letters.

Official HMRC links matter. This site explains the process in plain English and points readers towards official GOV.UK routes.

Safety guide

Official GOV.UK P800 Refund Links: How to Claim Safely (2025/26)

Independent UK guidance. We are not affiliated with HMRC or GOV.UK.

Many readers search directly for a GOV.UK P800 refund page because they want a fast, official route. That is understandable, but it also creates a risk: copied links and suspicious pages often rely on official-sounding wording to look trustworthy.

This page helps you recognise the official route, avoid common mistakes and understand what you should never enter on an unofficial website. It is designed as a safety checkpoint before you continue with any online claim process for the 2025/26 tax year.

If you are trying to check a P800 reference number, verify HMRC links or work out whether your letter is genuine, this page gives you the safest starting point before you continue.

Type GOV.UK addresses directly when possible.
Be careful with copied links from texts or emails.
Unofficial sites should not ask you to sign in to your tax account on their behalf.

Official URL checker

The safest habit is to begin from GOV.UK itself or type the official address manually. The official guidance page is www.gov.uk/p800refund, and the related service path is www.gov.uk/p800/refund. Be especially careful if a page uses urgent language, shortened links or unusual design choices while asking for financial details.

A genuine route should feel consistent with a government service. If the page looks more like a marketing site, asks for details too early or appears through an unexpected message, pause and check again before continuing. If you still need context, compare it with the full P800 refund guide before moving on.

Official

www.gov.uk/p800refund

Official

www.gov.uk/p800/refund

Fake-looking

www.gov-uk-p800.refund-claims.co

Fake-looking

www.gov.uk.p800-refund.co

  • Safer route: start from GOV.UK and follow the guidance for P800 refunds.
  • Be cautious: copied addresses, text links, or pages that do not look like a genuine government service.
  • Stop immediately if a page asks for unusual details before you are confident it is genuine.

Common wrong searches

Readers often search with versions such as gov p800 refund, gov uk p800 refund, www gov uk p800 refund or even gov uk tax refund login. Those searches can still be useful, but they should lead you towards official guidance rather than towards a page that only imitates it.

Searches based on copied text messages can also be risky because scammers often know what wording people expect to see. That is why the safer habit is to use the search as a prompt, avoid signing in through copied login pages, and then verify the route yourself. If you are ready to proceed after checking the domain, use the online claim guide rather than guessing the next step.

Why am I seeing different links in Google?

Google can show a mix of official guidance, sponsored listings and third-party tax services for the same search. That does not automatically mean a result is unsafe, but it does mean you should slow down and check the domain before clicking through to any refund or login page.

If you searched for a term such as gov uk tax refund login, skip anything that does not clearly end in .gov.uk when you are trying to reach the official HMRC route. Third-party services may have their own place, but they should never be confused with the official GOV.UK service.

  • Look for the .gov.uk domain before you sign in or enter refund details.
  • Be careful with sponsored results if your goal is the official HMRC route.
  • Restart from GOV.UK directly if a result feels unclear or overly sales-driven.

Signs a page may not be genuine

A suspicious page often reveals itself through small details rather than one obvious mistake. That can include odd spelling, unusual page layout, a web address that is only similar to GOV.UK, or pressure to continue quickly.

Scam messages sometimes bundle unrelated subjects together to create urgency. HMRC will not text you about your TV Licence or a Netflix subscription alongside a P800 tax refund.

If you have left the UK or stopped working, you may need a P85 or P50 form instead of waiting for a P800. That is a different route, so avoid forcing your situation into the wrong refund process. If you are still unsure what the letter itself means, start with What Is a P800? before entering any details.

  • The page appeared from an unexpected text or email.
  • The address bar does not clearly show GOV.UK.
  • The page asks for details before you understand what service you are using.

What to do if something feels wrong

If a page seems suspicious, do not continue. Close it, start again from GOV.UK, and avoid entering personal or banking details until you are satisfied that the route is genuine.

If you already clicked a suspicious link, it is still worth slowing down. In many cases the best immediate response is simply to stop, avoid entering anything else, and restart the process through the official route.

Where to go next

Sources

These pages are based on current official guidance and should be checked again if HMRC or GOV.UK updates the process.

Common questions

Is this site the official GOV.UK P800 service?

No. This site is independent and only explains how to identify and reach the correct official route.

Should I trust links in text messages about tax refunds?

Treat them carefully. It is safer to navigate to GOV.UK yourself rather than rely on links in unexpected messages.

What should I never enter on an unofficial page?

Never enter your National Insurance number, bank details, Government Gateway user ID or password on a page you reached from an unexpected link. Always check the address bar first.

Why do so many people search for GOV.UK P800 refund links?

Because they want the quickest possible official route. That makes this area attractive to scam messages and copied pages, which is why link-checking matters so much.

How do I know which HMRC login or refund page is official?

Use GOV.UK directly and check that the address clearly ends in .gov.uk before you sign in, enter a Government Gateway user ID or submit refund details.

How do I contact HMRC about a P800 tax refund?

Use the official HMRC Income Tax enquiries page on GOV.UK or the contact route shown in your letter. Avoid phone numbers or contact forms shown on unofficial refund websites.

What is a P800 reference number?

It is reference information shown on the P800 calculation or the related HMRC process. Check the official letter carefully and do not type the reference into an unofficial page just because it asks for it.

Last updated: 9 April 2026