TaxWise HK Logo TaxWise HK Contact Us
Contact Us
8 min read Beginner April 2026

Common Tax Filing Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

Learn about the most frequent errors people make when filing taxes in Hong Kong and practical strategies to ensure accuracy. We’ll walk you through the pitfalls and show you how to sidestep them completely.

Professional accountant in office explaining tax documents to client
Raymond Lam

Author

Raymond Lam

Senior Tax Education Specialist

Senior tax education specialist with 14 years of experience helping Hong Kong residents navigate salaries tax, allowances, and IRD obligations.

Why Tax Filing Accuracy Matters

Tax season brings stress for many Hong Kong residents. You’re juggling documents, trying to understand deductions, and hoping you don’t miss anything important. The truth is — most mistakes aren’t intentional. They happen because people don’t know what they’re looking for or misunderstand the rules.

We’ve seen it happen hundreds of times. Someone fills out their return carefully, submits it, and then gets contacted by the IRD about an error. Sometimes it’s a simple miscalculation. Sometimes it’s a deduction that wasn’t properly documented. And sometimes it’s something they didn’t realize they needed to include at all.

The good news? Most of these errors are preventable. Once you know what to watch for, you’ll file with confidence.

Quick Fact

Nearly 40% of tax queries to the IRD come from people who’ve already submitted their returns and realized they made errors. Many of these mistakes could’ve been caught before submission.

Missing or Incomplete Information

This is the single most common mistake we see. People forget to include documents, miss sections on the form, or provide incomplete information.

For example, you might forget to attach your salary certificates from all employers you worked for during the year. Or you might list rental income but forget to include the property’s maintenance expenses. These gaps create red flags at the IRD, which leads to assessments that may not be in your favor.

The solution? Create a checklist before you start. Write down every source of income — salary, rental, investment returns, business income. Then gather supporting documents for each one. Don’t rely on memory. File everything you think you might need, even if it seems minor.

Close-up of organized tax documents and filing checklist on wooden desk with pen
Person reviewing personal allowances form and calculating deductions with calculator

Overlooking Available Deductions and Allowances

Hong Kong offers plenty of personal allowances and deductions, but many people don’t claim them because they don’t realize they’re available. You might be leaving money on the table without even knowing it.

Common ones people miss include dependent allowances for children, aged parent or grandparent allowances, and self-education expenses. If you’re married, you might not know about married person’s allowance. If you contribute to a Mandatory Provident Fund, that’s deductible — but only if you claim it properly.

The key is understanding what you qualify for. Sit down with a list of all available allowances and check them against your situation. Don’t assume you know what applies to you — actually verify it. When you do claim deductions, make sure you have documentation to back them up. The IRD wants evidence.

Arithmetic and Calculation Errors

You’d be surprised how often people get caught out by simple math mistakes. Adding up income wrong, calculating deductions incorrectly, or making errors when figuring out your total assessable income. These seem basic, but they happen constantly.

What makes this especially problematic is that small errors compound. A mistake in calculating your rental expenses might mean you overstate your income by thousands of dollars, which pushes you into a higher tax bracket. Suddenly your tax bill is significantly higher than it should be.

The solution is simple but important: double-check all calculations. Better yet, use a spreadsheet or calculator and verify each number twice. Have someone else review the math if possible. Before you submit anything to the IRD, you should be 100% confident in your numbers.

Spreadsheet with financial data, calculator, and annual income summary on modern desk
Businessman in office checking deadline calendar on wall, professional workspace

Missing Filing Deadlines

The IRD doesn’t care if you didn’t realize the deadline was coming. Miss it, and you’re late — even if you only miss it by a day. Late filing comes with penalties and extra scrutiny on your return.

Here’s the thing: if you’re waiting until the last minute, you’re also more likely to make other mistakes because you’re rushing. You’ll skip steps, forget documents, or make calculation errors. The deadline pressure creates a perfect storm for filing mistakes.

Mark the deadline on your calendar now. In fact, set a deadline that’s two weeks earlier than the actual IRD deadline. Give yourself breathing room to gather documents, double-check everything, and make corrections if needed. You won’t regret having extra time.

Your Action Plan: 5 Steps to File Correctly

1

Gather Everything First

Before you touch a form, collect every document you’ll need. Salary certificates, rental receipts, investment statements, proof of deductions. Put it all in one place. This takes time but prevents mistakes later.

2

Create a Personal Summary

Write out all your income sources and deductions on a single page. Total salary: $X. Rental income: $Y. Deductions: $Z. This becomes your reference point for the entire filing process.

3

Work Through the Form Slowly

Don’t rush through the tax return form. Read each question carefully. Answer it fully. Check your answer. Move to the next one. Speed creates errors. Patience prevents them.

4

Verify Your Numbers Twice

After you’ve filled everything out, go back and check every number. Verify that your total income matches your documents. Confirm your deductions are correct. Look for any inconsistencies.

5

Get a Second Opinion

If possible, have someone else review your return before you submit it. A fresh pair of eyes catches mistakes you might miss. This is especially valuable if you have complex income or deductions.

Filing with Confidence

Tax filing doesn’t have to be stressful. Most mistakes happen because people rush or don’t know what to watch for. Once you understand the common pitfalls, you can avoid them entirely. You’ll file accurately, claim everything you’re entitled to, and submit your return on time.

The investment of a few extra hours upfront — gathering documents, double-checking numbers, reviewing your work — saves you headaches down the line. No IRD queries. No penalties. No stress about what you might have missed. Just a clean, accurate filing.

Take it one step at a time. Don’t feel rushed. Ask questions if you’re unsure about something. And remember: accuracy matters more than speed. You’ve got this.

Important Disclaimer

This article provides general educational information about Hong Kong tax filing practices and common mistakes. It isn’t tax advice, and circumstances vary significantly from person to person. Tax laws and regulations change, and what applies to one person may not apply to another. For specific guidance about your personal tax situation, consult with a qualified tax professional or contact the Inland Revenue Department directly. The information presented here is intended to help you understand the general landscape — not to replace professional advice.