Tag Archives: vat-registration

VAT: ‘Intention’ – The Euro Beer case

By   7 October 2019

Latest from the courts, the Euro Beer Distribution Ltd First Tier Tribunal (FTT) case.

The intention of a taxpayer is extremely important for a number of reasons. It is relevant where:

  • a VAT registration is requested
  • input tax is claimed
  • and in this case; whether deregistration is compulsory

Broadly, immediate action is dependent upon whether a business intends to make taxable supplies in the future. This intention dictates whether registration is possible, whether input tax may be claimed, and whether a business may remain VAT registered. Even if a business has the intention to make taxable supplies, it is sometimes difficult to evidence this to HMRC’s satisfaction.

Background

Euro Beer was in the business of importing and selling alcoholic drinks. It had been in business since 2004 and was also approved and registered as an owner of duty suspended goods under the Warehousekeepers and Owners of Warehoused Goods Regulations 1999.

Technical

HMRC compulsorily deregistered Euro Beer via VAT Act 1994, Schedule 1, para 13 (2) on the grounds that it believed that the appellant had ceased making taxable supplies. Nil returns had been submitted since 2016 and, after enquires, formed the view that there was no intention to make supplies in the future.

Euro Beer contended, unsurprisingly, that there was an intention to make taxable supplies in the future such that continued VAT registration was appropriate. Additionally, the reason for the nil returns was simply, at that time, business had dried up. The appellant provided limited evidence to support its intention. This comprised; emails between the directors and third-party contacts.

Decision

The appeal was dismissed and Euro Beer’s VAT deregistration (and revocation of approval from the Warehousekeepers and Owners of Warehoused Goods Regulations 1999) was confirmed as appropriate.

Commentary

This was hardly a surprising decision and one wonders why it got to court. It does, however, emphasise the importance of the concept of intention. This can be a subjective matter and HMRC place significant weight on documentary evidence. There is no question in law that HMRC must register/maintain registration/repay input tax if it is satisfied that there is a business which does not make taxable supplies but ‘intends to make such supplies in the course or furtherance of that business’ – VAT Act 1994, Schedule 1, para 9 (b). However, ensuring HMRC is satisfied is often problematic.

This is specifically difficult in the area of land and property. VAT registration and the associated input tax claims of a property developer is often the source of disputes. It is important to differentiate between an intention, and what actually happens. Often business plans change, or the original intention is not fulfilled. In such cases, there is a mechanism for repaying input tax claimed (VAT Gen regs 1995 reg 108) but this is only applicable in certain circumstances. The case of Merseyside Cablevision Ltd (MAN/85/327, VTD 2419) demonstrates that if an intention to make taxable supplies is thwarted, input tax claimed is not clawed back (a person who carries on activities which are preparatory to the carrying on of a business is to be treated as in business and is a taxable person).

It should be noted that a business does not have to specify a date by which it expects to make taxable supplies, or to estimate the value of them.

The lesson is; to document every business decision made:

  • board minutes, emails, business plans, letters etc
  • retain all correspondence with; third-parties
  • provide written advice from legal advisers, accounts etc
  • invoices demonstrating expenditure in respect of a new venture are persuasive
  • budgets and considered estimates can be of use
  • retain all advertising media, offers, promotions and other publicity.

Clearly for land and property additional; planning permission, land registry details, plans, surveys, fees, etc will build up a picture that there is an intention to make taxable supplies.

These are just examples and different business may have alternative evidence.

In commercial terms, it will be difficult for HMRC to be unsatisfied if a business is incurring costs in relation to a project – why would they devote time/staff/advisers/financial resources to something when there is no intention of deriving income?

One final point on the Euro Beer case. The judge stated; ‘an intention to make supplies requires more than a mere hope to be in a position to make supplies at some unspecified time in the future’. It is not enough for a business to ‘generally’ state that there is an intention.

VAT: Extent of welfare exemption – The Lilias Graham Trust case

By   3 October 2019

Latest from the courts

Certain welfare services are exempt from VAT via VAT Act 1994, Schedule 9, Group 7, Item 9 – services which are directly connected with the care or protection of children. In the The Lilias Graham Trust (LGT) First Tier Tribunal case, the scope of the exemption was considered.

Background

LGT, which has charitable status, operated residential assessment centres, which supported parents (many of whom had mental health issues) in learning how to care for their children.

It was common ground that LGT’s services were as summarised in a letter from Glasgow City Council (where relevant):

  • LGT is an assessment centre providing assessment services on the parenting capacity of those referred to the service
  • The assessment services cover families where there is an uncertainty about whether the parent(s) can safely look after their children
  • LGT is simply acting as an observer watching the parent’s care for their own children and providing information in the form of advice
  • LGT is not providing any treatment in the form of medical care for any illness or injury
  • LGT’s recommendation following the assessment provides a recommendation to social workers around whether the parent(s) has sufficient capacity to keep their child safe and healthy
  • GCC viewed the residential accommodation as a fundamental part of the provision of the assessment services on the parenting capacity of those families which were referred to LGT.

Although the major part of LGT’s income came from the Local Authority fees, it is also subsidised to a degree by grants and donations.

Technical

In this case the odd position was that HMRC was arguing for exemption because, in learning how to care for their children, the services were “closely linked” to welfare services or “directly connected” to them as provided for by the Principal VAT Directive and the VAT Act in turn.

LGT contended that their supplies to a Local Authority (which could recover any VAT charged) were taxable as they did not fall within the welfare definition. LGT admitted that there was a causal relationship between the services provided and the care and protection of children, but the connection was too remote to be deemed to be a direct connection – There were several intervening factors and intermediaries between the service provided and the care and protection of children.

At issue was net input tax of circa £400,000 which would be recoverable by LGT if its supplies were taxable, but not if they were exempt. Guide to partial exemption here.

Decision

The court found that the essential purpose of the supplies made by LGT was to ensure that the child was better cared for and had optimal protection. That is precisely why the Local Authority employed LGT. Its supplies are both closely linked and directly connected with the protection of children as also to their care. Accordingly, the appellant made supplies of welfare services which are exempt from VAT. The fact that LGT provided its services to the Local Authority rather than the parents did not mean that its services should be taxable. Therefore, there was no output tax chargeable to the Local Authority and no input tax recovery by LGT on expenditure attributable to those exempt supplies.

Commentary

In this case, HMRC originally ruled that the services were taxable and LGT were required to VAT register, it even issued a late registration penalty. HMRC clearly subsequently changed its view which put input tax which LGT had recovered at risk. There are often disputes on the extent of the exemption, and sometimes debates on whether a service is supplied, or simply staff providing their services. It is important to understand these sometimes subtle differences as getting it wrong can be costly, as LGT found out.

VAT: Digital services to EU customers after Brexit

By   1 October 2019

HMRC has published guidance on how to account for digital sales to EU customers when the UK’s MOSS system becomes redundant. Full document here.

After Brexit, businesses will no longer be able to use the Mini One Stop Shop (MOSS) to declare sales and pay VAT due in EU Member States.

The final return period for MOSS will be the period ending 31 December 2019.

A business will be able to use MOSS to:

  • submit a final return by 20 January 2020
  • amend the final return until 14 February 2020
  • update registration details until 14 February 2020
  • view previous returns

For sales made after Brexit, a business will need to register for either:

  • VAT MOSS in any EU member state
  • VAT in each EU member state where you sell digital services to consumers.

Registration deadline

A business will need to register by the 10th day of the month following its first sale to an EU customer after Brexit.

A business cannot register before Brexit.

The EC website may be used to:

  • check whether a business should register for Union or Non-Union MOSS
  • find out who to contact to register for VAT MOSS in an EU member state.

Further details are provided in the HMRC guidance.

The above assumes that the UK will leave the EU, and that there will be no agreements on VAT before Brexit

What are digital services?

Radio and television broadcasting services

These include:

  • the supply of audio and audio-visual content
  • live streaming

Telecommunications services

This means transmission of signals of any nature by wire, optical, electromagnetic or other system and includes:

  • fixed and mobile telephone services
  • Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
  • voice mail, call waiting, call forwarding, caller identification, 3-way calling and other call management services
  • paging services
  • access to the internet

Electronically supplied services

These rules only apply to e-services that you supply electronically and includes things like:

  • supplies of images or text, such as photos, screensavers
  • supplies of music, films and games
  • online magazines
  • website supply or web hosting services
  • distance maintenance of programmes and equipment
  • supplies of software and software updates
  • advertising space on a website

VAT: Disaggregation – The Caton case

By   12 September 2019

Latest from the courts.

In the Charles John Caton First Tier tribunal (FTT) case the issue was whether HMRC were correct in deciding that a business was artificially split to avoid VAT registration (so called disaggregation, details here).

Background 

The appellant ran a café known as The Commonwealth for a number of years. Subsequently, his wife opened a restaurant in adjoining premises. HMRC decided that this was a single business and required a backdated VAT registration. This resulted in a retrospective VAT return and associated penalties for late registration.

HMRC pointed to the leases, the liability insurance and the alcohol licence, which are all in Mr Caton’s name, together with the fact he signed a questionnaire stating that he was sole proprietor of the restaurant, and the fact that the washing up area is shared, and say that these show that there was only one business. They also said that the fact that Mrs Caton did not have a bank account and therefore card takings from the restaurant went into Mr Caton’s bank account further bolsters their case.

The appellant proffered the following facts to support the contention that there were two separate businesses: There were separate staff in the restaurant and the café. Those for the cafe were hired by Mr Caton, and are his responsibility, and those for the restaurant were hired by Mrs Caton and are her responsibility. The cooking is done completely separately, by different people using different cooking areas. The menus are completely different, and when the café sells the restaurant ‘specials’ they are rung up on the till with a marker that shows they are restaurant sales. Although the majority of the food is ordered from the same place, there are separate orders (even though these orders are placed at the same time and paid for using Mr Caton’s bank account). Mrs Caton decides on the menu for the restaurant and the prices. She keeps the cash generated from the sales in the cafe, and this is not banked in Mr Caton’s account. Depending on the ratio of cash sales to card sales in any given month, she may need to pay some of it to Mr Caton for the rent, rates etc, but any surplus she keeps.There were two tills, one for the restaurant and one for the cafe.

The Law

The VAT Act 1994, Schedule 1 para 1A provides that:

(1)  Paragraph 2 below is for the purpose of preventing the maintenance or creation of any artificial separation of business activities carried on by two or more persons from resulting in an avoidance of VAT.

(2) In determining for the purposes of sub-paragraph (1) above whether any separation of business activities is artificial, regard shall be had to the extent to which the different persons carrying on those activities are closely bound to one another by financial, economic and organisational links.

VAT Act 1994, Schedule 1 para 2 provides that:

(1)… if the Commissioners make a direction under this paragraph, the persons named in the direction shall be treated as a single taxable person carrying on the activities of a business described in the direction…

Decision

The judge decided that she considered the facts that point to the businesses being run and owned as two separate operations were significantly stronger that facts that point to a joint ownership. And the appeal was allowed.

Commentary

These types of cases are decided on the precise facts. I think that this one must have been a close call. It appears the fact that may have swung it was that the judge commented We find it extremely surprising, in this case, that HMRC have never met with Mrs Caton or, in correspondence, asked her for any details. Mr Caton and HMRC have both told us that he has consistently maintained from the first meeting the fact that Mrs Caton runs the restaurant. We find it impossible that HMRC could be in possession of facts sufficient to make a reasonable decision on this case without hearing from Mrs Caton.” That approach by HMRC is never going to play well in court. It strikes me that this type of approach is increasing in the department. Whether this is down to lack of training, resources or simple corner cutting to save time I cannot say.

If HMRC issue a direction under VAT Act 1994, Schedule 1 para 2 that two or more businesses should be treated as one, it is always worth having that decision reviewed. This is especially relevant in cases such as this where customers are the final consumers making the VAT sticking tax.

VAT and Customs Duty: Brexit latest

By   20 August 2019

HMRC has been issuing guidance in readiness for Brexit, and in particular, a No Deal Brexit.

They generally provide information on preparations and actions required by business that trade cross-border.

Imports

If a business bring goods into the UK from the EU there are actions you should take before and after you’ve imported the goods. This applies to:

  • importers
  • freight forwarders
  • fast parcel operators
  • customs agents
  • traders who move their own goods

(This guidance does not apply to moving goods between Ireland and Northern Ireland). A border on the island of Ireland is a whole other matter.

The full guidance for importers.

Exports

Again, this guidance relates to:

  • exporters
  • freight forwarders
  • fast parcel operators
  • customs agents
  • traders who move their own goods.

The full guidance for exporters.

Email updates on Brexit

We recommend that business falling within the above definitions sign up the free HMRC Brexit email alert service.

This service covers: information about Brexit including the Article 50 process, negotiations, and announcements about policy changes as a result of Brexit.

It is crucial that businesses understand the impact of a No Deal Brexit and make preparations for all eventualities of the political negotiations. Sign up here

VAT – A beginner’s practical guide

By   2 August 2019

I am often asked if there is a VAT beginner’s guide, I find HMRC guidance generally unhelpful for someone without a tax background, so, here is all the basic information you may need in one place.

 What is VAT?

Value Added Tax (VAT) is a tax charged on most business transactions made in the UK. It is charged on goods and services and is an ad valorem tax, which means it is proportionate to the value of the supply made.

All goods and services that are VAT rated (at any rate including zero) are called “taxable supplies”. VAT must be charged on taxable supplies from the date a business first needs to be registered. The value of these supplies is called the “taxable turnover”.

Exempt items

VAT does not apply to certain services because the law says these are exempt from VAT. These include some; financial services, property transactions, insurance education and healthcare. Supplies that are exempt from VAT do not form part of the taxable turnover.

The VAT rates

There are currently three rates of VAT in the UK:

  • 20% (standard rate) – Most items are standard rate unless they are specifically included in the lower rate categories.
  • 5% (reduced rate) – this applies to applies to certain items such as domestic fuel and power, installation of energy-saving materials, sanitary hygiene products and children’s car seats.
  • 0% (zero rate) – applies to specified items such as food, books and newspapers, children’s clothing, new houses and public transport.

VAT registration

A business is required to register for, and charge VAT, if:

  • the taxable turnover reaches or is likely to reach a set limit, known as the VAT registration threshold
  • a VAT registered business has been acquired as a going concern (TOGC)
  • potentially; goods or services have been purchased VAT free from non-UK countries (a self-supply)

Registration limit

The current VAT registration threshold is £85,000. If at the end of any month the value of taxable supplies made in the past twelve months is more than this figure a business MUST VAT register.  A business can opt to register for VAT if its taxable turnover is less than this. Please note that taxable turnover is the amount of income received by a business and not just profit. If a business does not register at the correct time it will be fined.

Additionally, if, at any time there are reasonable grounds to expect that the value of the taxable supplies will be more than the threshold in the next thirty days alone a business must register immediately.

What are the exceptions?

VAT is not chargeable on:

  • taxable supplies made by a business which is not, and is not required to be, registered for VAT
  • zero rated supplies
  • supplies deemed to be made outside the UK
  • exempt supplies

What if a business only makes exempt or zero-rated supplies?

Exempt

If a business only makes exempt supplies, it cannot be registered for VAT. If a business is registered for VAT and makes some exempt supplies, it may not be able to reclaim all of its input tax.

Zero rated

If a business only supplies goods or services which are zero-rated, it does not have to register for VAT, but, it may do so if it chooses.

What is input tax and output tax?

Input tax is the VAT a business pays to its suppliers for goods and services. It is VAT on goods or services coming into a business. In most cases, input tax is the VAT that registered businesses can reclaim (offset against output tax).

Output tax is the term used to describe the VAT charged on a business’ sales of goods or services. Output tax is the VAT a business collects from its customers on each sale it makes.

A full guide to VAT jargon here

Is there anything that will make VAT simpler for a small business?

There are a number of simplified arrangements to make VAT accounting easier for small businesses. These are:

  • Cash Accounting Scheme
  • Annual Accounting Scheme
  • Flat Rate Scheme
  • Margin schemes for second-hand goods
  • Global Accounting
  • VAT schemes for retailers
  • Tour Operators’ Margin Scheme
  • Bad Debt Relief

Details may be found here and here and here.

VAT calculation

  • A business adds VAT to the value of sales it makes to other businesses or customers
  • The VAT amount is reached by multiplying the sale amount by the VAT rate percentage, then adding that to the value of the sale.
  • The total of the VAT on sales for a VAT period is output tax
  • For a VAT period, a business will total all VAT it has been charged by suppliers (eg stock, repairs, rent, and general business expenses etc) – this is input tax.
  • On the VAT return for the period, the amount payable or reclaimable to HMRC is the output tax less input tax.

Records

A business must keep complete, up-to-date records that enable it to calculate the correct amount of VAT to declare on its returns. VAT records must be kept for at least six years, because a business will need to show them to HMRC when asked.

It is acceptable for ordinary business records to be the basis for VAT accounts. A business will need records of sales and purchases (and any adjustments such as credit notes) including details of how much VAT the business charged or paid. If trading internationally, records of imports and exports/dispatches and acquisitions with all overseas territories, including the EU must be recorded. VAT records must show details of any supplies a business has given away or taken for personal use.

VAT records must also include all invoices you have received and issued. Invoice requirements here

Records will also need to include a VAT account, showing how total input tax and output tax has been calculated to include in your VAT returns.

It is vital to ensure that the VAT records are accurate. Failure to do so can lead to significant tax penalties

MTD

For certain business, the new MTD rules apply and certain software must be used. Details here

Time of supply (tax point)

It is important to establish the time VAT is due. Full details here

VAT returns

A VAT registered business must submit returns on a regular basis (usually quarterly or monthly). A VAT return summarises a business’ sales and purchases and the VAT relating to them. All the information a business requires must be in its VAT records, specifically a VAT account.

Return requirements include:

  • sales total (excluding VAT)
  • output tax – this also includes VAT due on any other taxable transactions, eg; barters, non-monetary consideration, goods taken for personal use
  • value of purchases (excluding VAT)
  • input tax claimable
  • total of VAT payable/claimable
  • summary of trade with other EU Member States

Online VAT returns are due one month and seven days after the end of the VAT period. Payment of any VAT owed is due at the same time, although HMRC will collect direct debit payments three days later.

VAT: Land and property quiz – Answers

By   1 August 2019

The “fun” quiz.

The important thing to consider is what the purchaser does, or intends to do, with the land once purchased. This will dictate the input tax recovery position. So, can the input tax be recovered? Answers to quiz questions in the 26 July 2019 post below

Answers 

On the purchased land the person constructs:

  1. a dwelling and supplies the house on a 25-year lease

Yes

The lease is 21 years or over, so it is zero rated. However, a lease under 21 years would be an exempt so no recovery. For more details

  1. an office and uses it for his own business supplying FS to a client in China

Yes

However, if the FS supply had been to the UK or another EU Member State, the supply would be exempt so no input tax recovery. This may change in the event of a No-Deal Brexit.

  1. a storage facility and a fully taxable company leases it to another company in the same partly exempt VAT group after opting to tax

No

Unlikely to be full input tax recovery as the VAT group is itself partly exempt. The Capital Goods Scheme (CGS) may apply.

  1. a block of ten flats with a gym and swimming pool which tenants are entitled to use. Grants 99 years leases on all flats

Yes

The supply is zero rated, notwithstanding there are additional (to usual residential dwellings) facilities.

  1. a dwelling but uses it for short term holiday lets of no more than a fortnight.

Yes

Holiday lets are standard rated, so the business would be taxable. The purchaser would need to VAT register, however.

  1. a warehouse which is sold on completion but without an option to tax being made before the sale

Yes

A ‘new” commercial building (one under three years old) is mandatorily standard rated, so no option to tax is required.

  1. the land is held with the intention of constructing dwellings at some time in the future, which could be over six years

Yes

As long as the intention remains, and can be evidenced, the input tax may be attributed to the future taxable, zero rated, supply.

  1. a factory which is not subjected to an option to tax but is leased to an US company

 No

The place of supply (POS) is the UK as this is where the immovable property is located, regardless of the status of the client. Consequently, this is an exempt supply with no right to input tax recovery.

  1. a block of three flats which are rented for six months before freehold sale

No, or maybe, or yes

The initial supply is exempt, so the input tax is, preliminarily, attributed to the short term lets. However, a simplified form of the partial exemption de minimis limits may be used and, depending on the scale of the development, it is possible that some, or all, of the input tax may be recovered despite the initial exempt supplies.

  1. a sport hall by a school Academy which is leased to sporting charities and also used for its own educational purposes. No option to tax

No

It would be unlikely that an Academy would be able to recover all the input tax. Because it would make (exempt) business supplies, this would fall outside the VAT Act 1994, Section 33 rules, so there would be no input tax recovery in respect of those activities. There would be an apportionment and only the input tax referable to own use would be recoverable as those supplies of education would be non-business. If the Academy opted to tax the facilities (and was VAT registered), the input tax would be recoverable in full. No input tax referable to business use would be possible if the Academy was using VAT126 claims. VAT and Academies

  1. a manufacturing plant which a company rents to a connected (non-VAT grouped) party which makes and sells toys. The option is taken

Yes

As the connected party is fully taxable the anti-avoidance rules do not apply. If the connected party was not able to recover the VAT charged to it (say it made exempt supplies) the anti-avoidance legislation would kick in and the option would be disapplied, meaning that the input tax in the hands of the developer would not be recoverable.

  1. a car showroom and offices which a company uses for its own business of selling cars, providing finance and brokering insurance

No

There would be mixed use; car sales are taxable, finance and insurance are exempt, so some of the input tax would probably not be recoverable (dependent upon the de minimis limits). The development would be an overhead of the business. It is likely that the property would be an item covered by the CGS.

  1. a care home for the elderly which a company uses for that purpose

No

This likely be an exempt supply, so no input tax recovery on supplies which are properly VATable. There may be reliefs on construction costs, however.

  1. a small cabin office and the remaining land is used for a forestry business which will have no sales for ten years (when the trees are grown)

Yes

Although the intended taxable supplies are some way off, as long as the intention can be evidenced, the input tax may be recovered when incurred as it will relate to those intended taxable transactions. If the intention changes, this may impact the initial recovery. More information

  1. a residential block which is immediately transferred to an associated company (an arm’s length transaction) on completion. No tenants are in situ.

Yes

The transfer of the freehold triggers the zero rating. The associated company may then, if it chooses, make exempt supplies without a VAT cost. This type of planning can be very helpful.

So there we have it. How did you get on?  I would say that any score over eight is very good.

VAT: Land and property – A “fun” quiz

By   26 July 2019

VAT: Land and property

I am quite often asked the seemingly straightforward question: Can I recover VAT on this land purchase? So, by way of a little quiz, I look at why this can be a loaded question.

Background

A person purchases bare land in the UK for £450,000 which is subjected to the option to tax. So, VAT of £90,000 is incurred. Your task, should you wish to accept it, is to say yes, no, or maybe to input tax recovery in the following situations (assume the purchaser is VAT registered).

Questions

On the purchased land the person constructs:

  1. a dwelling and supplies the house on a 25-year lease
  2. an office and uses it for his own business supplying FS to a client in China
  3. a storage facility and a fully taxable company leases it to another company in the same partly exempt VAT group after opting to tax
  4. a block of ten flats with a gym and swimming pool which tenants are entitled to use. Grants 99 years leases on all flats
  5. a dwelling but uses it for short term holiday lets of no more than a fortnight.
  6. a warehouse which is sold on completion but without an option to tax being made before the sale
  7. the land is held with the intention of constructing dwellings at some time in the future, which could be over six years
  8. a factory which is not subjected to an option to tax but is leased to an US company
  9. a block of three flats which are rented for six months before freehold sale
  10. a sport hall by a school Academy which is leased to sporting charities and also used for its own educational purposes. No option to tax
  11. a manufacturing plant which a company rents to a connected (non-VAT grouped) party which makes and sells toys. The option is taken
  12. a car showroom and offices which a company uses for its own business of selling cars, providing finance and brokering insurance
  13. a care home for the elderly which a company uses for that purpose
  14. a small cabin office and the remaining land is used for a forestry business which will have no sales for ten years (when the trees are grown)
  15. a residential block which is immediately transferred to an associated company (an arm’s length transaction) on completion. No tenants are in situ.

We are looking at recovery of input tax on the land purchase here, ignoring other (say; construction and professional) costs. That is another article in itself.

The questions have been simplified, usually, they tend to be rather more “involved”.

Answers

…soon!

I have to charge myself VAT?!

By   9 July 2019
How comes?!

Well, normally, the supplier 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. Don’t get caught out!

Here are just some of the situations when you have to charge yourself VAT:

Purchasing services from abroad

These will be obtained free of VAT from an overseas supplier. What is known as the ‘reverse charge’ procedure must be applied. Where the reverse charge procedure applies, the recipient of the services must act as both the supplier and the recipient of the services. On the same VAT return, the recipient must account for output tax, calculated on the full value of the supply received, and (subject to partial exemption and non-business rules) include the VAT charged as input tax. 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 creating a level playing field between purchasing from the UK and 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.  On the same VAT return, the recipient must
      1. account for output tax, calculated on the full value of the supply received, in Box 1;
      2. (subject to partial exemption and non-business rules) include the VAT stated in box 1 as input tax in Box 4; and;
      3. include the full value of the supply in both Boxes 6 and 7.
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.

Purchasing goods from another EU Member States

Something similar to reverse charge; called acquisition tax, applies to goods purchased from other EC Member States. These are known as acquisitions (they are imports if the goods come from outside the EU and different rules apply). The full value of the goods is subject to output tax and the associated input tax may be recovered by the business acquiring if the goods are used for taxable purposes. If you are not already registered for VAT in the UK and acquire goods worth £85,000 or more in the UK from other EC countries, you will have to register for VAT in the UK on the strength of the value of the acquisition tax. A business will also have to complete an Intrastat Supplementary Declaration (SDs) if its acquisitions of goods from the EC exceed an annual amount – currently £1.5 million.

Intrastat_flow_diagramMore details on Intrastat Supplementary Declarations here

Deregistration

Any goods on hand at deregistration with a total value of over £1,000 on which input tax has been claimed are subject to a self supply. This is a similar mechanism to a reverse charge in that the goods are deemed to be supplied to the business by the business and output tax is due. However, in these circumstances it is not possible to recover any input tax on the self supply.

Flat Rate Scheme

There is a self supply of capital items on which input tax has been claimed when a business leaves the flat rate scheme (and remains VAT registered).

Mobile telephones

In order to counter missing trader intra-community fraud (‘MTIC’), supplies of mobile telephones and computer chips which are made by one VAT registered business to another and valued at £5,000 and over are subject to the reverse charge. This means that the purchaser rather than the seller is responsible for accounting for VAT due.

And not forgetting the new domestic reverse charge for building and construction here.

Land and buildings…. and motor cars

There are certain circumstances where land and buildings must be treated as a self supply… but that is a whole new subject in itself… as is supplies in the motor trade.

Even if the result of a self-supply or reverse charge is VAT neutral HMRC is within its rights to assess and levy penalties and interest in cases where the charge has not been applied; which always seems unfair.  However, more often than not simple accounting entries will deal with the matter…. if the circumstances are recognised and it is remembered to actually make the entries!

VAT: Brexit – Intending Trader registration for overseas businesses

By   14 June 2019

With the continuing uncertainty over a No-Deal Brexit, which appears to be a more likely prospect given recent political events, HMRC has made a statement on the process of registering non-UK EU businesses as intending traders in the UK.

Background

What is an intending trader?

An intending trader is a person who, on the date of the registration request:

  • is carrying on a business
  • has not started making taxable supplies
  • has an intention to make taxable supplies in the future

If the business satisfies HMRC of its intention, HMRC must VAT register it. VAT Act 1994, Schedule 1, 9 (b). It is, in some cases, difficult to convince that there is a genuine intention to make taxable supplies. This often comes down to documentary evidence.

Why do overseas businesses need to register as intending traders?

In the event of a No-deal Brexit, it is assumed that the EU VAT simplification that relieves the current obligation to be registered in the UK will no longer available. As a consequence, the EU supplier will itself become responsible for accounting for VAT on sales deemed to be made in the UK. In order to do this, the business will require a UK VAT registration. As the simplification is in place until Brexit, the registration will be required the very day after the UK leaves the EU – currently 1 November 2019.

Therefore, many EU businesses have applied for UK VAT registration as intending traders. That is, they do not currently make supplies, but intend to in the future (from 1 November 2109).

The issue

The Chartered Institute of Taxation has reported that businesses applying for intending trader registrations are experiencing difficulties with the process.

In response, HMRC have stated:

“Businesses in the position you have described can register for VAT using the Advanced Notification facility, by registering online requesting a voluntary registration from an advanced date of 1 November 2019. In the ‘business activity’ section they should enter trade class/SIC code 99000 European Community. In the free text box they should describe accurately what the business does and ensure there is a positive amount entered in the ‘taxable turnover in the next 12 months’ box. If this is not done the application will be rejected. This information will enable the VAT Registration Team (VRT) to identify and actively manage any registration that is conditional on the UK leaving the EU without a deal.

If there is a change to the date of withdrawal from the EU, the VRT will amend the Advanced Notification date to match this new date. If the UK enters a transitional period or agrees a deal with the EU that allows current arrangements to continue then the registration will be cancelled. The approval of an Advanced Notification registration in these circumstances is only made as a contingency for the UK leaving the EU without a deal and the VAT number may not be used unless that happens. The business will receive an automated notification of an Advanced Notification VAT Registration and the VRT may follow this up with a manual letter to further explain the conditions and both.

With the UK having agreed an extension to the date of withdrawal from the EU, we would not expect businesses to use this facility until closer to the 1st November.”

It is clearly prudent for overseas businesses which make certain supplies in the UK to properly prepare for a No-Deal Brexit. However, experience insists that many have not identified or made provisions for this outcome.

We are able to assist and advise other EU Member State businesses on this process.