A library for charities and CASCs to claim Gift Aid (including Small Donations) from HMRC
'Gift Aid' is a UK tax incentive that enables tax-effective giving by individuals to charities in the United Kingdom. Gift Aid increases the value of donations to charities and Community Amateur Sports Clubs (CASCs) by allowing them to reclaim basic rate tax on a donor's gift.
'HMRC Charity Repayment Claims' is a library for submitting Gift Aid claims to HMRC.
Big Give forked this library from JustinBusschau/hmrc-gift-aid
along with the supporting php-govtalk
counterpart in 2021, as those libraries are
no longer maintained for active versions of PHP.
We don't offer support for the library, but plan to maintain it for the foreseeable future, with tests running against verions of PHP still receiving security support.
Charities running campaigns on our platform who are using our managed service to claim their Gift Aid can get in touch here.
The library can be installed via Composer. To install, simply add
it to your composer.json
file:
{
"require": {
"thebiggive/hmrc-gift-aid": "^1.0"
}
}
And run composer to update your dependencies:
$ curl -s http://getcomposer.org/installer | php $ php composer.phar update
composer run test
Enable Xdebug locally to see coverage data. This should still run with a note about the configuration and no coverage stats if it's missing.
From the introduction to the IRMark Specification:
There is legislation in place that states that in the case of a civil dispute between the Inland Revenue (IR) and a taxpayer with regards to an Internet online submission, the submission held by the Inland Revenue is presumed to be correct unless the taxpayer can prove otherwise. In other words the burden of proof is on the taxpayer. There is therefore a requirement to enable the IR Online services and software that uses the services to provide a mechanism to aid a taxpayer to prove whether or not the submission held by IR is indeed the submission they sent.
That is a very roundabout way of saying the XML that you submit must include a signature of some sort. The signature can be used to prove that what the HMRC received is actually what you intended to send. HMRC will, in their turn, include a similar signature in any responses they send to you. In the case of submissions to the HMRC Government Gateway, this signature is the IRmark (pronounced IR Mark).
It is strongly recommended that both the XML that you send and the XML that you receive should be stored in case there is any dispute over the claim - be that a dispute over the submission of the claim or over the content of the claim itself.
This library will generate the appropriate IRmark signature for all outgoing messages and check the IRmark on all incoming messages. This library, however, does not attempt to store or in any way persist any data whatsoever. This means that your application will need to store a number of pieces of information for use during dispute resolution. Having said that, it is not necessary to store ALL messages sent to or received from the gateway. The following is a recommended set of data to be stored by your application.
-
HMRC Correlation ID This will be generated by HMRC when you send your request and returned in all subsequent messages. You will also need to supply this correlation ID when submitting any messages or queries related to the claim. While it is not essential to store this, I do recommend it.
-
The Claim Request The communication protocol requires a number of messages to be exchanged in the course of a claim submission. I recommend storing only the initial claim request as this is the message that will contain all the claim data. Other messages simply facilitate the assured delivery of that initial message.
-
The Claim Response This is not necessarily the first message you get back after sending your Request - there will be polling and other protocol messages first. HMRC will first verify the validity of the submitted claim (note this is verifying that the structure of the message is valid and that the data conforms to the required standards). Once this is done you will receive a response message with an acknowledgement similar to this:
HMRC has received the HMRC-CHAR-CLM document ref: AA12345 at 09.10 on 01/01/2014. The associated IRmark was: XXX9XXX9XXX9XXX9XXX9XXX9XXX9XXX9. We strongly recommend that you keep this receipt electronically, and we advise that you also keep your submission electronically for your records. They are evidence of the information that you submitted to HMRC.
See the sample source code below to see how and where to extract the above data from the library.
The first thing you need is to identify both the organisation(s) and the individual submitting the Gift Aid claim.
The Vendor
data identifies the company and software product used to submit the claims. Each
vendor is assigned a Vendor ID and is required to identify the software that will submit the
claims. To obtain an ID, please see the
Charities Online Service Recognition Process.
$vendor = [
'id' => '4321',
'product' => 'ProductNameHere',
'version' => '0.1.2'
];
The Authorised Official
is an individual within the organisation (Charity or CASC) that
has been previously identified to HMRC as having the authority to submit claims on behalf of
the organisation. That individual will register for an account to log in to Charities Online
and the user ID and password are required when submitting claims. The additional data sent
with the claim - name and contact details - must be consistent with that held by HMRC.
$authorised_official = [
'id' => '323412300001',
'passwd' => 'testing1',
'title' => 'Mr',
'name' => 'Rex',
'surname' => 'Muck',
'phone' => '077 1234 5678',
'postcode' => 'SW1A 1AA'
];
Each Charity or CASC that is registered with HMRC will have two identifiers. The first is the
Charity ID
which is a number issued by HMRC when registering as a charity. The second is the
Charities Commission Reference
which is issued by the relevant charity regulator. We also
need to know which regulator the charity is registered with.
$charity = [
'name' => 'A charitible organisation',
'id' => 'AB12345',
'reg_no' => '2584789658',
'regulator' => 'CCEW'
];
Finally, you will need to build a list of all donations for which you want to claim a Gift Aid repayment. For each donation you will also need to know the name and last known address of the donor.
$claim_items = [
[
'donation_date' => '2014-01-01',
'title' => 'Mr',
'first_name' => 'Jack',
'last_name' => 'Peasant',
'house_no' => '3',
'postcode' => 'EC1A 2AB',
'amount' => '123.45'
],
[
'donation_date' => '2014-01-01',
'title' => 'Mrs',
'first_name' => 'Josephine',
'last_name' => 'Peasant',
'house_no' => '3',
'postcode' => 'EC1A 2AB',
'amount' => '876.55'
],
];
And now that you have all the data you need, you can submit a claim.
This applies to all cases below. Whenever you need to send something to HMRC you will need to prepare the gaService object as shown here.
$gaService = new GiftAid(
$authorised_official['id'],
$authorised_official['passwd'],
$vendor['id'],
$vendor['product'],
$vendor['version'],
true // Test mode. Leave this off or set to false for live claim submission
);
$gaService->setCharityId($charity['id']);
$gaService->setClaimToDate('2014-01-01'); // date of most recent donation
$gaService->setAuthorisedOfficial(
new AuthorisedOfficial(
$authorised_official['title'],
$authorised_official['name'],
$authorised_official['surname'],
$authorised_official['phone'],
$authorised_official['postcode']
)
);
$gaService->setClaimingOrganisation(
new ClaimingOrganisation(
$charity['name'],
$charity['id'],
$charity['regulator'],
$charity['reg_no']
)
);
Once you have prepared the gaService object and collected your donations and donor data, you are ready to send the claim.
$gaService->setCompress(true);
$response = $gaService->giftAidSubmit($claim_items);
if (isset($response['errors'])) {
// TODO: deal with the $response['errors']
} else {
// giftAidSubmit returned no errors
$correlation_id = $response['correlationid']; // TODO: store this !
$endpoint = $response['endpoint'];
}
if ($correlation_id !== NULL) {
$pollCount = 0;
while ($pollCount < 3 and $response !== false) {
$pollCount++;
if (
isset($response['interval']) and
isset($response['endpoint']) and
isset($response['correlationid'])
) {
sleep($response['interval']);
$response = $gaService->declarationResponsePoll(
$response['correlationid'],
$response['endpoint']
);
if (isset($response['errors'])) {
// TODO: deal with the $response['errors']
}
} elseif (
isset($response['correlationid']) and
isset($response['submission_response'])
) {
// TODO: store the submission_response and send the delete message
$hmrc_response => $response['submission_response']; // TODO: store this !
$response = !$gaService->sendDeleteRequest();
}
}
}
If you submit a claim and then subsequently need to reverse or refund a donation for which you have already claimed Gift Aid, you will need to submit an adjustment with your next claim. The adjustment value is set to the value of the refund you have already been paid for the refunded donation. In other words if you claim Gift Aid on a £100.00 donation you will be paid £25.00 by HMRC. If you subsequently refund that £100.00 you submit an adjustment to HMRC for the £25.00.
Prepare the gaService object and your claim items as usual, but before calling giftAidSubmit
add the adjustment as shown below.
// submit an adjustment to a previously submitted claim
$gaService->setGaAdjustment('34.89', 'Refunds issued on two previous donations.');
Prepare the gaService object in the usual way and then call requestClaimData
. This will
return a list of all previously submitted claims with status. It's a good idea to delete older
claim records - if nothing else it prevents having to download them all every time you need to
call requestClaimData
.
$response = $gaService->requestClaimData();
foreach ($response['statusRecords'] as $status_record) {
// TODO: deal with the $status_record as you please
if (
$status_record['Status'] == 'SUBMISSION_RESPONSE' AND
$status_record['CorrelationID'] != ''
) {
$gaService->sendDeleteRequest($status_record['CorrelationID'], 'HMRC-CHAR-CLM');
}
}
For more information on the Gift Aid scheme as it applies to Charities and Community Amateur Sports Clubs, and for information on Online Claim Submission, please see the Gov website.
For information on developing and testing using HMRC Document Submission Protocol, please see Charities repayment claims support for software developers.