Further to the history of objection to reduce rating e-publications, and the 2020 budget announcement which stated that e-publications will be zero rated from 1 December 2020, the Chancellor of the Exchequer has today announced that this date is brought forward and zero rating will now apply from 1 May 2020 – which is of course tomorrow.
Further details of the measure here.
Zero rating
This brings electronically supplied sales in line with traditional printed matter. The zero rate will apply to:
- books
- booklets
- brochures
- pamphlets
- leaflets
- newspapers
- journals and periodicals (which include magazines)
- children’s picture and painting books
What supplied electronically means
The term ‘supplied electronically’ is not defined in legislation. It falls to be interpreted in accordance with its generally accepted meaning and includes supplies made over the internet and by e-mail.
Excluded items
Items that are not entitled to the VAT zero rate:
- Advertising
If more than half of an e-publication is devoted to advertising, audio or video content, its supply will remain standard rated for VAT purposes.
- Audiobooks
The zero rating extension only applies to the supply of electronic versions of books already zero rated in UK law. As such, zero-rating is limited to electronic versions of books that can be read or looked at. Supplies of audiobooks remain taxable at the standard rate whether supplied in a physical or digital format.
- Intellectual property
- e-book readers
e-book readers are one form of hardware to which e-books can be downloaded before being read but are not in themselves e-books. Therefore, supplies of e-book readers are standard rated
- Software
Software, eg: an app is used to access e-publications but is not in itself an e-publication. Therefore, supplies of such software are standard rated.
Lending of electronic publications
The lending of any of the zero rated e-publications for a charge (for example, by a library) is zero rated.
Summary
Although welcome, as zero rating is VAT nirvana, the short lead in time could catch out some business which make such online supplies. Businesses which provide e-publications may want to consider making a retrospective claim as a result of the News Corp case.