A glossary
Anyone who has had even the slightest brush with VAT will know that it is a very complex tax. Now, multiply that complexity by the intricacy and occasionally arcane nature of property law and one may see that the outcome will be less than straightforward. I have produced a general guide and an article on residential property VAT Triggerpoints
I hope the following glossary will help with steering through some of the difficulties.
- Annex– a building which is joined to or is next to a larger main building usually an extension or addition to a building
- Assign – to transfer the right or interest in a property from one party to another
- Break clause – a clause allowing either landlord or tenant to give written notice after a particular date or period of the tenancy in order to end the tenancy
- Beneficial owner – party deemed to make a supply of property rather than the legal owner
- Blocked input tax – VAT which a developer is unable to recover when constructing a new dwelling. Typically, expenditure on good such as; carpets, fitted furniture, and gas and electrical appliances
- Building materials– goods ordinarily incorporated into a property which attracts similar VAT treatment to the construction services.
- Capital Goods Scheme(CGS) – a method of calculating the recovery amount of input tax incurred on property over a ten-year period, Details of the CGS here
- Certificate – a document issued to a supplier in order to obtain certain zero-rated or reduced-rated building work
- Change of number of dwellings– usually a conversion from commercial to residential, or a single house into flats (or flats into a single house) at 5% VAT
- Consideration– a thing done or given in exchange for something else = a supply. Usually quantified in money, but in some cases non-monetary consideration
- Construction of new dwellings – a zero rated supply
- Contract – legal document detailing the agreement of terms between the vendor and buyer
- Contractor – entity responsible for building works
- Conversion–work on a non-residential building which results in a property designed as a dwelling(s) being created
- Covenants – rules governing the property in its title deeds or lease. May impact the definition of dwellings
- Curtilage– either a garden, or an area surrounding a building which is deemed to be part of the property
- Designed as a dwelling– a property initially designed for residential use, regardless of any subsequent alternative use
- Dilapidations – items that have been damaged during a tenancy for which the tenant is responsible for the cost of repair or replacement. Usually VAT free
- DIY Housebuilders’ Scheme – a scheme which ‘self-builders’ to recover VAT on a new build dwelling or conversion. Details here
- Dwelling– a building deemed to be residential
- Empty house – if, in the ten years before work on a dwelling starts, it has not been lived in, the work may be subject to 5% rather than 20% VAT
- Exempt– a supply that is VAT free. It usually results in attributable input tax falling to be irrecoverable
- Facade– a wall (or two walls on a corner plot) which may be retained without affecting the zero rating of a new dwelling construction
- Grant– a supply of an interest in land
- Holiday home – the sale or long lease of a holiday home cannot be zero-rated even if it is designed as a dwelling
- Housing Association – a non-profit organisation which rents residential property to people on low incomes or with particular needs
- In the course of construction– meaningful works that have occurred in relation to the construction of a building (but prior to its completion)
- Incorporated goods – goods sold with a new dwelling which are zero rated and to which the input tax block does not apply. See white goods
- Input tax– VAT incurred on expenditure associated with property
- Interest in, or right over, land– the right to access to and use of, land. Usually via ownership or lease
- Lease – legal document governing the occupation by the tenant of a premises for a specific length of time
- Licence to occupy– a permission to use land that does not amount to a tenancy
- Live-work units – a property that combines a dwelling and commercial or industrial working space. Usually subject to apportionment
- Major interest–a supply of a freehold interest or a lease exceeding 21 years
- Multiple occupancy dwelling – a dwelling which is designed for occupation by persons not forming a single household
- New building–a commercial building less than three years old the sale of which is mandatorily standard
- Non-residential– a commercial building which is not used as a dwelling
- Open market value – likely sale price with a willing seller and buyer, with a reasonable period of marketing and no special factors affecting the property
- Option to tax (OTT) – act of changing the exempt sale or letting of a commercial into a taxable supply. The purpose is to either; recover input tax or avoid input tax being charged. Details here
- OTT disapplication– the legal removal of a vendor’s option to tax
- OTT not applicable – the OTT does not apply to residential buildings (so VAT can never apply to dwellings)
- OTT revocation– the ability to revoke an option to tax after six months or twenty years
- Partial exemption– a calculation to attribute input tax to exempt and taxable. Generally, VAT incurred in respect of exempt supplies is irrecoverable
- Person constructing – a developer, contractor or sub-contractor who constructs a building
- Premium – upfront payment for a supply of property
- Relevant Charitable Purpose (RCP)–the use by a charity for non-business purposes or for use as a village hall or similar
- Relevant Residential Purpose (RRP)– dwelling used for certain defined residential purposes, eg; children’s home, a hospice or student accommodation
- Reverse surrender– a tenant surrenders an onerous lease to the landlord and makes a payment to surrender
- Share of freehold – where the freehold of the property is owned by a company and the shareholders are the owners of the property
- Single household dwelling– a building designed for occupation by a single household
- Snagging – the correction of building faults. Usually follows the VAT liability of the original work
- Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) – tax paid by a purchaser of a property. SDLT is increased if the sale of a commercial property is the subject of an option to tax
- Substantial reconstruction– certain significant works to a listed building
- Surrender– a tenant surrenders the lease to the landlord in return for payment
- Taxable supply– a supply subject to VAT at the standard, reduced or zero-rate
- Use as a dwelling – a building which was designed or adapted for use as someone’s home and is so used
- Vendor – entity selling a property
- Transfer of a Going Concern (TOGC) – the VAT free sale of the assets of a business as a going concern. This may include a tenanted property
- Zero-rated– a taxable supply subject to VAT at a rate of 0%
We strongly recommend that advice is obtained if any property transaction is being undertaken.
Details of our land and property services may be found here.