The Fulfilment Businesses (Approval Scheme) Regulations 2018
New regulations come into place on 1 April 2019 which will affect fulfilment businesses (entities which carry out the process of taking an order and executing it by making it ready for delivery to its intended customer, usually involving warehouse pickup, packaging, labelling, etc). These are known as The Fulfilment Businesses (Approval Scheme) Regulations 2018 and apply to businesses distributing goods to customers in the UK on behalf of suppliers based in countries outside the EU (third countries). The regulations set out that such businesses will be required to be approved by HMRC in order to carry on its activities. Voluntary registration will begin from 1 April 2018.
The rules cover:
- how to register
- how and when to make an application for approval
- the obligations under the scheme (which include the requirement to carry out due diligence in respect of the third party suppliers and verifying a third country customer’s VAT registration number)
- and, as always with VAT; the penalties for breaches of the regulations
The Finance (No. 2) Act 2017, section 49(1) provides that a person may not carry on a third country goods fulfilment business otherwise than in accordance with an approval given by the HMRC. A person carries on a third country goods fulfilment business if they meet the test set out in section 48 of the Finance (No. 2) Act 2017 . This test may be summarised as:
- a person carries on a third country goods fulfilment business if the person, by way of business;
- stores third country goods which are owned by a person who is not established in a Member State, or
- stores third country goods on behalf of a person who is not established in a Member State,
at a time when the conditions below are met in relation to the goods.
The conditions are that:
- there has been no supply of the goods in the United Kingdom for the purposes of VATA 1994, and
- the goods are being offered for sale in the United Kingdom or elsewhere
Usually, but not always, these are goods purchased online. Goods are “third country” goods if they have been imported from a place outside the EU.
These regulations follow on from measures announced in 2016 which state that HMRC will direct certain representatives for overseas businesses to appoint a VAT representative with joint and several liability for online marketplaces. The measures enable HMRC to hold an online marketplace jointly and severally liable for the unpaid VAT of an overseas business that sells goods in the UK via that online marketplace.
These measures further strengthen HMRC’s hand in an area which they consider a substantial amount of VAT is lost to them.
Please contact us if these new rules affect you or your clients.