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In the Staysure.Co.UK Limited First Tier Tribunal (FTT) case the issue was whether services of service of generating insurance leads for the appellant fell within the insurance exemption or whether the reverse charge (please see guide below) should be applied.
Background
Staysure is an FCA regulated
insurance broker based in the UK which provided travel insurance for people aged 50 or over, home insurance, cover for holiday homes and
motor vehicles. It received services from an associated company belonging in Gibraltar.
The services amounted to:
- the provision of insurance
leads online and offline
- placing targeted
advertising in the press, television and online
- owning and operating the
domain and related website: staysure.co.uk
- providing insurance
quotations via a bespoke quote engine which employed complex algorithms to
produce a personalised price for each customer and resulted in an offer which
was competitive from the customer’s perspective while also maximising profit
for Staysure, the underwriter, and the service provider
- reporting on where prospective customers were falling out
of the quotation and lead selection process, and in so doing demonstrate
opportunities for further product development
If the services were not covered
by the relevant exemption, they would be subject to a reverse charge via The Value
Added Taxes Act 1994 section 8 by Staysure. As
the recipient was not fully taxable, this would create an actual cost when the
charge was applied. HMRC considered the service taxable and:
- registered Staysure on
the strength of the deemed self-supply
- assessed for the input
tax which was created by the reverse charge.
The assessment was circa £8 million, penalties of over £1
million plus interest. This was on the basis that HMRC concluded that the
supply was taxable marketing rather than exempt intermediary services.
Decision
The court decided that the marketing and
technology was used to find clients and introduce them to the insurer. The
supplier was not supplying advertising, but qualified leads produced by that
advertising. The quote engine was not merely technical assistance, but a
sophisticated technology which assessed the conditions on which customers might
be offered insurance. Consequently, these services were exempt as the supplies
of an insurance intermediary (The VAT Act 1994, Schedule 9, Group 2, item 4)
and Staysure was not required to account for UK VAT under the reverse charge.
The appeal was allowed. The services
were within the insurance exemption, essentially because they were linked to
essential aspects of the work carried out by Staysure, namely the finding of
prospective clients and their introduction to the insurer with a view to the
conclusion of insurance contracts.
Technical
This is another case on the application of the reverse
charge. I looked at a previous case here
However, the judge helpfully summarised the following principles on insurance intermediation after considering previous case law.
- whether a person is an insurance broker or an insurance agent depends on what they do. How they choose to describe themselves or their activities is not determinative
- it is not necessary for a person to be carrying out all the functions of an insurance agent or broker for the exemption to be satisfied
- it is essential that the person has a relationship with both the insurer and the insured party, but this does not need to be a contractual relationship. The requirement that the person has a relationship with the insurer is satisfied where the person is the subcontractor of a broker, which in turn has a relationship with the insurer
- where the person is a subcontractor of a broker, the exemption is satisfied:
- where the relationship with the customer is indirect or where the subcontractor is one of a chain of persons bringing together an insurance company and a potential insured, but;
- the subcontractor’s services must be linked to the essential aspects of the work of an insurance broker or agent, namely the finding of prospective clients and their introduction to the insurer with a view to the conclusion of insurance contracts
Commentary
Care should always be taken when outsourcing/offshoring services or in fact, when any business restructuring takes place. The VAT impact of doing so could provide costly. In this case, the distinction between intermediary and marketing services was considered. It went in the taxpayer’s favour, but slightly different arrangements could have created a large VAT hit.
Guide
Reverse charge on services received from overseas
Normally, the supplier of a service is the person who must account
to the tax authorities for any VAT due on the supply. However, in certain
situations, the position is reversed and it is the customer who must account
for any VAT due. This is known as the ‘Reverse Charge’ procedure.
Generally, the Reverse Charge must be applied to services which are received by
a business in the UK VAT free from overseas.
Accounting for VAT and recovery of input tax.
Where the Reverse Charge procedure applies, the recipient of the services must act as both the supplier and the recipient of the services.
Value of supply
The value of the deemed supply is to be taken to be the
consideration in money for which the services were in fact supplied or, where
the consideration did not consist or not wholly consist of money, such amount
in money as is equivalent to that consideration. The consideration
payable to the overseas supplier for the services excludes UK VAT but includes
any taxes levied abroad.
Time of supply.
The time of supply of such services is the date the supplies are
paid for or, if the consideration is not in money, the last day of the VAT
period in which the services are performed.
The outcome
The effect of the provisions is that the Reverse Charge has no net
cost to the recipient if he can attribute the input tax to taxable supplies and
can therefore reclaim it in full. If he cannot, the effect is to put him in the
same position as if had received the supply from a UK supplier rather than from
one outside the UK. Thus the charge aims to avoid cross border VAT rate
shopping. It is not possible to attribute the input tax created directly to the
deemed (taxable) supply.