In the aftermath of the horrific Grenfell fire, a lot of buildings require unsafe cladding to be replaced.
A new Brief clarifies HMRC’s policy on the deduction of VAT incurred on cladding remediation works which are carried out on existing residential buildings. It sets out:
- the reason VAT costs are incurred when carrying out remediation works to residential buildings with fire and safety defects
- the circumstances in which the VAT incurred in providing remediation works can be recovered
Broadly, the distinction is whether the work qualifies as snagging. If it does, the VAT treatment follows the liability of the original building work – zero rated if the original construction was of a zero-rated new residential building, ie; they are supplied in the course of construction of a qualifying building.
If not snagging, the remedial work will be standard rated.
If the work is standard rated, it may be recoverable by the recipient in certain circumstances.
Snagging
HMRC’s definition of snagging is “the carrying out of remedial works to correct faulty workmanship or replace faulty materials”. Normally, it is carried out by the original developer under the terms of the original contract. This means it is not seen as a separate supply of construction services. Snagging covers faults that are:
- found soon after the building is completed
- still covered by the building contract
More details on snagging here.
Furthermore, HMRC has published Guidelines for Compliance GfC11. This guidance covers HMRC’s existing policy on the VAT treatment of remedial works and includes:
- the definition of snagging
- an explanation of when you can recover input tax
- examples to help you work out the VAT treatment of remedial works
- examples of documents and evidence you should keep
- information about correcting a submitted return
HMRC state that its policy has not changed.