HMRC Business Risk Review (BRR+) - What It Means for Your Business and How To Manage It Effectively
What Is a Business Risk Review (BRR+)?
HMRC’s Business Risk Review Plus (BRR+) is the framework used to assess the tax compliance risk profile of large and complex businesses. At its core, BRR+ is about answering one question: “Can HMRC trust this business to get its tax right?”
The outcome of the review is a formal risk rating (Low, Moderate, Moderate-High, or High), which directly influences:
- The level of scrutiny applied by HMRC.
- The frequency of engagement and subsequent reviews.
- The likelihood of enquiries and intervention activity.
The process is typically led by a Customer Compliance Manager (CCM) and applies to large businesses (generally those with turnover >£200m or complex operations).
HMRC’s Current Approach (BRR+ Framework)
As a behavioral-led assessment, HMRC’s approach has evolved significantly in recent years. BRR+ places less emphasis on size and inherent risk and greater focus on how well a business manages that risk.
HMRC assesses businesses across three core pillars:
1. Systems and Delivery
- Are systems, data, and processes robust and scalable?
- Are returns filed accurately and on time?
- Is there sufficient resourcing and technical capability?
2. Internal Governance
- Is there clear accountability up to Board level?
- Are tax risks identified, documented, and monitored?
- Are obligations (e.g. SAO, UTT, CbCR, Pillar Two) fully met?
3. Approach to Tax Compliance
- Is the business open and transparent with HMRC?
- Is the tax strategy clearly articulated and followed?
- Is tax planning aligned with commercial substance and legislative intent?
HMRC assesses businesses against a detailed set of low-risk indicators across the three pillars. The more indicators that are not met, the higher the risk rating.
Process and Timing
A typical BRR+ cycle involves:
- Pre-review data requests and questionnaires.
- HMRC forming an initial risk view ahead of the meeting.
- A review meeting (often 2–3 hours).
- Issuance of a final risk rating and action plan.
Recent Developments and HMRC Focus Areas
HMRC continues to refine BRR+ to reflect emerging risks and policy priorities, with several notable developments:
- Increased emphasis on evidence and substance.
- Greater requests for supporting documentation.
- Focus on how controls operate in practice, not just on policies.
- Integration of new regimes (e.g. Pillar Two).
- BRR+ indicators now explicitly incorporate OECD Pillar Two requirements.
- Expect scrutiny of how new obligations are embedded into the governance framework.
Practical Steps to Prepare for a BRR+
Preparation should start well in advance of the review. In our experience, the most successful engagements are those that treat BRR+ as an ongoing governance process, not a one-off event.
- Assess your current risk position.
- Strengthen your tax control framework.
- Enhance governance and accountability.
- Ensure documentation is “review-ready”.
- Prepare for the review meeting.
Final Takeaways
A strong BRR+ rating is not just about compliance, it is a clear signal of governance quality, operational control, and risk maturity. Businesses that invest early in governance, transparency, and controls are best placed to:
- Reduce HMRC scrutiny.
- Avoid disputes and penalties.
- Enhance stakeholder confidence.
- Support future transactions and exit readiness.
How Alvarez & Marsal Can Help
A&M’s Tax Risk and Dispute Management team provides end-to-end BRR+ support, including:
- Pre-review diagnostics and mock BRR exercises.
- Design and implementation of best-in-class tax control frameworks.
- Development of tax governance documentation and policies.
- Support with HMRC engagement and positioning.
- Ongoing risk monitoring and enhancement programs.
We combine deep technical expertise with a practical approach, helping businesses not only achieve a stronger BRR+ rating but also embed sustainable, value-driven tax governance.