ICO fines for practices who do not pay their registration fees

From 25 May 2018, the Data Protection (Charges and Information) Regulations 2018 required every organisation or sole trader who processes personal information to pay a data protection fee to the Information Commissioners Office (ICO), unless they are exempt. The new data protection fee replaces the previous requirement to ‘notify’ (or register) with the ICO. For most organisations the fee remains unchanged at £35 a year if paid by direct debit.

Make sure you pay your fee to the ICO when it becomes due, as since September 2018, the ICO (Information Commissioners Office) has issued 900 notices of intent to fine to organisations, including GP practices, for non-payment of their registration fee and last month, the ICO also issued the first 100 penalty notices.

If you do not pay then the ICO fine can range from £400 to £4,350. ICO fines are tiered to reflect the size of individual organisations, ie, organisations in the lowest tier (turnover of up to £630,000 or up to 10 employees) can be fined £400 for failing to pay their annual fee. Organisations in the next tier up (turnover of up to £36m or up to 250 employees) can face a £600 fine for failing to pay their annual fee.

The ICO has taken a strong line on non compliance by organisations, stating: “You are breaking the law if you process personal data or are responsible for processing it and do not pay the data protection fee to the ICO”.

It is also worth noting that at the time of paying your registration fee you will need to provide details of your DPO (Data Protection Officer).

Further information is available on the ICO website.

Last updated : 17 Dec 2018

 

Tips of the month March 2021 (24 Mar 2021)

We provide monthly tips based on common queries which come through to us from London GPs and practice teams. These are shared via social media and collated for...
Read more »

2021 is an election year, stand for your LMC (24 Mar 2021)

This year all the seats on our 27 LMCs are up for election, with nominations opening on 26 April and closing on 28 May. During the week of 26 April...
Read more »

GP Forward View five years on (24 Mar 2021)

The GP Forward View (GPFV) launched on 21 April 2016, with several commitments and aims for improving general practice and the care provided to patients. On 28 April, Dr Lisa...
Read more »

Stress Awareness Month 2021 (24 Mar 2021)

April is Stress Awareness Month and a timely point to reflect on the challenges faced by general practice over the course of the last year. The Coronavirus pandemic has been a very stressful...
Read more »

Covid-19 vaccination programme guidance round-up, March 2021 (23 Mar 2021)

Since our last newsletter there have been a number of new or updated pieces of guidance that are applicable to the GP run parts of the Covid-19 vaccination programme. The...
Read more »

Workforce survey results - winter 2020 (23 Mar 2021)

We had responses from 384 individuals, working in 316 different practices out of the 1,100 member practices surveyed between 24 November to 16 December 2020. This represents a response rate...
Read more »

Covid-19 vaccine hesitancy outreach (23 Mar 2021)

Londonwide LMCs and London general practice are supporting Public Health England (PHE) London’s “speaker bureau” initiative, connecting speakers with good general clinical and Covid-19 vaccine knowledge with community events. This...
Read more »

Response to CQC strategy consultation (23 Mar 2021)

Londonwide LMCs responded to the CQC’s strategy consultation before the closing deadline of 4 March 2021. Key points from the response are summarised below, group around the strategy’s four...
Read more »

Why sessional GPs should stand for their LMC (23 Mar 2021)

Ahead of this summer’s elections, Dr Veno Suri explains how he got involved with his area’s LMC and the value he has had from LMC membership. Veno joined Hillingdon LMC...
Read more »
Next Page »
« Previous Page