Category Archives: VAT Planning

VAT implications of renewable energy sources

By   15 January 2015

If you own land and install solar panels (which we shall use as an example, although the rules apply equally to any way of generating renewable power), it is relatively straightforward; as you are either consuming the power, or are the provider supplying electricity back to the National Grid.

Where the position may get slightly more complicated is where a solar panel business buy the ‘space’ to install energy producing equipment from someone else. Many businesses are renting the roof space from others upon which to install the solar panels. The businesses may pay the roof owners with ‘free’ electricity in return for renting out this space. Supply of electricity to the owners of the site

For a solar panel business leasing a site, the supply of electricity to the owners of that site is deemed to be a supply of goods.

The business installing the solar panels is the taxable person (if they are, or should be registered for VAT) and they are supplying the owners of the site with a ‘cheap’ supply of electricity in the course of the furtherance of their business.

The supply of electricity for domestic use is a reduced-rate supply under Group 1 of Schedule 7A VATA 1994. The reduced rate of VAT is 5%. If the site owner is using the electricity for domestic purposes then the reduced rate of 5% should apply. If the electricity is being used for business purposes then the supply becomes standard-rated at 20%. However, if there is mixed use, then so long as more than 60% of the use is domestic then the whole supply will be treated as ‘qualifying use’ ie; domestic, and the 5% will apply to the entire amount. Generally speaking, VAT charged at 5% is fully or partly irrecoverable by the recipient.

So in this scenario, the land owner is providing something in exchange for this electricity use; the land owner is giving the solar panel business the use of his land. Therefore this is ‘consideration’ for a service; even if it is ‘non-monetary’ consideration.

This means that the solar panel business will have to calculate a value for this consideration and then charge 5% (or 20%) VAT as necessary, on this amount if they are VAT registered.

The value placed on this non-monetary consideration is not usually a concern for the land owner making the supplies of this land, as this land supply is itself exempt from VAT.

The supply of the land
This is a supply of land by the owner of the site. Unless the land has been ‘opted to tax’ (OTT) then this supply will be exempt from VAT. If the land has been OTT by the landowner – the parties will need to look at the valuation of the (non-monetary) consideration as this will be subject to VAT at 20%. If there is no OTT and the supply is exempt; for a non-VAT registered person, this will have no impact, and this income will not be included in taxable supplies which count towards the VAT registration threshold. If a VAT registered entity makes exempt supplies of land, consideration must be given to his partial exemption position.

VAT consequences of the Feed-In Tariff
In recognition of the higher cost of producing electricity in this manner, people participating in the Feed in Tariff scheme will receive payment under a “generation tariff”. This payment is not consideration for any supply and it is therefore outside the scope of VAT.

Supply of electricity to the electricity board
In addition to the Feed-In Tariff there is the additional income which you may receive from the electricity board ie; the “Export Tariff”. These payments are “consideration for supplies of electricity by people participating in the Feed in Tariff scheme to the electricity company, where they are made by taxable persons in the course of their business”. The export tariff is not outside the scope of VAT and therefore it is a supply of electricity made in the course of the furtherance of your business to the electricity supplier. It will attract standard rated VAT as it is not the supply for domestic use.

 Further…

A recent Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU – the EU’s highest court) case has ruled in favour of the taxpayer after he argued that solar panels installed on his house constituted a business for VAT purposes. This is good news for any people who supply any energy into the grid and are paid a feed-in tariff (FiT) for doing so.

It means that anyone receiving the FiT can VAT register and reclaim (at least some) VAT incurred on the purchase and installation of solar panels plus input tax incurred on any other goods and services relating to the panels.

The supply and installation of “energy saving materials”, including solar panels, is currently subject to a reduced VAT rate of 5% in the UK. The European Commission is currently challenging this policy, arguing that the tax incentive goes beyond the scope of the law. The VAT Directive only allows Member States to apply reduced VAT rates to a limited number of goods and services, which are specified in an annex to the directive. So the cost of buying and installing solar panels may increase in the future.

It is anticipated that HMRC will need to deal with “thousands” of extra registration applications resulting in significant additional VAT repayments.

Bad Debt Relief (BDR) – Avoiding the VAT burden.

By   27 November 2014

Under the normal rules of VAT, a supplier is required to account for output tax, even if the supply has not been paid for (however, the use of cash accounting or certain retail schemes removes the problem of VAT on bad debts from the supplier).

There is specific relief however:

Conditions for claiming BDR

The supplier must have supplied goods or services for a consideration in money, and must have accounted for and paid VAT on the supply. All or part of the consideration must have been written off as a bad debt by making the appropriate entry in the business’ records (this does not have to be a “formal” procedure). At least six months (but not more than three years and six months) must have elapsed since the later of the date of supply or the due date for payment.

Records required
Various records and evidence must be kept (for four years from the date of claim), in particular to identify:
• The time and nature of the supply, the purchaser, and the consideration
• The amount of VAT chargeable on the supply
• The accounting period when this VAT was accounted for and paid to HMRC
• Any payment received for the supply
• Entries in the refund for bad debts account
• The accounting period in which the claim is made.

Procedure for claiming BDR
The claim is made by including the amount of the refund in Box 4 of the VAT Return for the period in which the debt becomes over six months old.

Repayment of refund
Repayment of VAT refunded is required where payment is subsequently received or where the above conditions have not been complied with.

Refund of input tax to debtor
Businesses are required to monitor the time they take to pay their suppliers, and repay input tax claimed if they have not paid the supplier within six months. Subsequent payment of all or part of the debt will allow a corresponding reclaim of input tax.

Finally, there is tax point planning available to defer a tax point until payment is received for providers of continuous supplies of services

VAT – Medical practices and property

By   18 November 2014

This article is specific to medical practices (or any other professional practice which makes predominantly exempt supplies) which wants to buy or improve property.

Registration when purchasing practice property – what you need to know:

The majority of the services provided by medical practices are exempt from VAT.  Good news one would think; there is no need to charge VAT on most goods and services supplied, and no need to deal with VAT returns, records and inspections.  Additionally, there is no exposure to the increasingly widely applied and swingeing penalty regime. However, there is one often repeated question from practices; “How can we reclaim the VAT we are charged?”  This is an even more pressing question when the VAT incurred (input tax) is on significant expenditure such as purchasing a property of undertaking a major refurbishment. This article looks at the basic VAT rules applying to practices and what opportunities are available. The first point to make is that if a practice only makes exempt supplies (of medical services) it is not permitted to register for VAT and consequently cannot recover any input tax.  Therefore we must look at the types of supplies that a practice may make that are taxable (at the standard or zero rate).  If any of these supplies are made it is possible to VAT register regardless of the value of them.  This is called a voluntary registration and provides the practice with the ability to reclaim, at least some, input tax.  Of course, if taxable supplies are made, the value of which exceeds the current turnover limit of £81,000 pa, registration is mandatory. Examples of services and goods which may be taxable are;

  • Drugs, medicines or appliances that are dispensed by doctors to patients for self-administration
  • dispensing drugs against an NHS prescription is zero-rated.
  • drugs dispensed against private prescriptions is standard-rated.
  • Signing passport applications.
  • Medico legal services that are predominately legal rather than medical – for example; negotiating on behalf of a client or appearing in court in the capacity of an advocate.
  • Clinical trials or market research services for drug companies that do not involve the care or assessment of a patient.
  • Paternity testing.
  • Certain rental of rooms
  • Providing professional witness evidence
  • Any services which are not in respect of; the protection, maintenance or restoration of health of a patient.

So what does VAT registration mean?

Once you join the “VAT Club” you will be required to file a VAT return on a monthly or quarterly basis.  You will have to issue certain documentation to patients/organisations to whom you make VATable supplies.  You may need to charge VAT at 20% on some services and the range of services which may become VATable in the future is likely to grow.  You will be able to reclaim VAT charged to you on purchases and other expenditure subject to partial exemption rules (see below).  You will have to keep records in a certain way and your accounting system needs to be able to process specific information.

Specific considerations

Because doctors usually provide services which attract varying VAT treatment, a practice will be required to attribute VAT incurred on expenditure (input tax) to each of these categories.  Generally speaking, only VAT incurred in respect of zero-rated and standard-rated services may be recovered.  In addition, there will always be input tax which is not attributable to any specific service and is “overhead” eg; property costs, professional fees, telephones etc.  There is a set way in which the recoverable portion of this VAT is calculated.  VAT registered entities which make both taxable and exempt supplies are deemed “partly exempt” and must carry out calculations on every VAT return.

Partial Exemption

Once the calculations described above have been carried out, the resultant amount of input tax which relates to exempt supplies is compared to the de-minimis limits (broadly; £625 per month VAT and not more than 50% of all input tax).  If the figure is below these limits, all VAT incurred is recoverable regardless of what activities the practice is involved in. Therefore, any accounting system must be capable of attributing input tax to the following headings; taxable (at 20% or zero) exempt and overhead (attributable to both taxable and exempt).

VAT registration in summary

Benefits:

  • Recovery of input tax; the cost of which is not claimable in any other way.
  • Potentially, recovery of VAT on items such as property, refurbishment and other expenditure that would have been unavailable prior to VAT registration.
  • Only a small amount of VAT is likely to be chargeable by a practice.
  • May provide opportunities for pre-registration VAT claims.

Drawbacks

  • Increased administration and staff time.
  • Exposure to VAT penalties and interest.
  • May require VAT to be added to some services provided which were hitherto VAT free.
  • Likely that only an element of input tax is recoverable as a result of partial exemption.
  • Uncertainty on the VAT position of certain services due to current EC cases.
  • Potential increased costs to the practice in respect of professional fees.

How to register

Practices will need to consider how they should be registered, for example individually as sole proprietors or jointly as partnerships. The legal entity chosen should reflect actual working arrangements, so if several doctors work together in a practice, they would normally be registered together as a partnership. VAT registration will cover all the supplies made by the doctors involved in the registered legal entity. For example, where a doctor is registered as a sole proprietor all the income he or she receives, for both medical and non-medical purposes, is subject to the VAT rules relating to such supplies. It may also be possible to VAT register as a company or an LLP depending on the structure of a practice and associated entities. Registration may be applied for using a form VAT1 on-line.

Specific VAT issues for property transactions

Purchase

If possible, it would obviously be preferable to purchase a property without VAT.  These properties are likely to be older buildings as new commercial properties (under three years old) will be mandatorily standard rated.  If the property being purchased is residential, then it will be VAT free.  It is also possible for a vendor to “opt to tax” a commercial property, meaning that a unilateral choice has been made to add VAT to the sale price.  If the property is subject to VAT on the sale or long lease then we must consider the ability to recover this. If there is VAT on a property, it may be used as a lever to reduce the agreed sale price. Assuming a VAT registration is in place for a practice the VAT on the purchase will be an “overhead” for partial exemption purposes so the input tax will feed into the partial exemption calculation and some of it will be recoverable.  If the property is >£250,000 then something known as the Capital Goods Scheme (details Capital Goods Scheme – Guide) will apply and the amount of input tax claimed will need to be adjusted annually over a ten year period. If part of the property is to be sub-let to a third party, it is possible for the practice to opt to tax the rent.  This will improve the practice’s ability to recover input tax on the purchase. Alternatively, a third party entity (eg; a company, an LLP or an individual doctor – the entity must not be “connected” to the entity occupying the premises) may purchase the property, VAT register, opt to tax the building itself, and charge rent to the practice which uses the property.  This means that the purchasing party may immediately recover 100% of the VAT incurred on the purchase, but will need to add VAT to the rent to the practice.  Care should be taken with a structure such as this and professional help should be sought.

Sale

The sale of a property will be VATable if it has been subject to the option to tax and exempt if there is no option and the property is over three years old.  If the property was purchased by a third party (as above) it may be possible to treat the sale of the building as a VAT free “transfer of a going concern”.

Summary

As may be seen; VAT is not straightforward for doctors’ practices but it is worthwhile looking to see if it is possible to reduce or mitigate the actual cost that VAT represents to practices

Tax Points (Time Of Supply)

By   30 October 2014

The tax point for a transaction is the date the transaction takes place for VAT purposes.

You need to know this because it’s included on VAT invoices and it tells you in which VAT period the transaction should be accounted for.  The tax point may be summarised (in most circumstances) as the earliest of:

  • The date an invoice is issued
  • The date payment is received
  • The date title to goods is passed, or services are completed.

Some brief examples:

Situation Tax point
No invoice needed Date of supply
VAT invoice issued Date of invoice
VAT invoice issued 15 days or more after the date of supply Date the supply took place
Payment or invoice issued in advance of supply Date of payment or invoice (whichever is earlier)
Payment in advance of supply and no VAT invoice yet issued Date payment received

The date of supply is:

  • for goods – the date they’re sent, collected or made available (eg installed in the customer’s house)
  • for services – the date the work is finished

There are certain exceptions, so care should be taken when establishing a tax point.

Holding companies in VAT groups and input tax recovery

By   29 September 2014

Care must be taken when considering the recoverability of input tax incurred by a holding company.

In the past holding companies which were members of a VAT Group were treated in the same way as any other member of the group. As a result, input tax incurred by the holding company were recoverable by reference the the VAT group’s (as a whole) recovery position.

As a result of the recent Court of Appeal judgement in the case of BAA Ltd HMRC have announced an updated policy HERE

The revised policy is that that input tax is only recoverable by holding companies where it is incurred in the course of an economic activity and there is a direct and immediate link to taxable supplies, This means that a passive holding company cannot now rely solely on its membership of a VAT group to recover input tax.  For recovery, the VAT must be incurred in respect of taxable supplies made by the holding company itself.

For information on the impacts on this change – please contact us.

With the Scottish vote approaching….

By   10 September 2014

What happens if Scotland gains independence?

A VAT what if….

If the Scots vote for, and gain, full independence from the UK, it is likely that the country will become a separate Member State of the EU. According to David Cameron; It’s currency will become the Euro and it will need to form its own authority for administering VAT. Although cross border controls will not be introduced, the VAT treatment of cross-border transactions will change significantly. Apart from the usual currency exchange issues, UK businesses will also be required to complete additional EC Sales Lists, Intrastat Declarations, and potentially a lot of other administrative and statistical documentation.

UK businesses will also need to determine the status of its Scottish customer, which in turn will establish the place of supply, which will dictate whether UK VAT, Scottish VAT, or no VAT is chargeable. Then there are the Distance Selling rules to consider. Some UK businesses will be required to register in Scotland as well as the UK if they sell goods by mail order. And don’t forget the changed VAT treatment of goods and services purchased from Scotland; in most cases a UK reverse charge will be applicable. Depending on circumstances though, UK businesses and residents will incur Scottish VAT and if they do, only some will be able to recover it. This will not be via a usual UK VAT return, but via an alternative VAT claim method which also adds complexity. Then there is the increase in triangulation cases, never the most straightforward VAT subject!

A simple supply from Carlisle to Ayr would will need to be analysed with a massive amount more information required plus the additional bureaucratic form filling. This added complexity will also increase the possibility of errors on which penalties will be levied.

John Swinney, the cabinet secretary for finance in the Scottish Government has pointed out that an independent Scotland would be able to choose its own levels of income tax and VAT, as well as taking control of other sources of revenue such as alcohol and tobacco duty, air passenger duty and landfill tax.

From a practical point of view, will shops and other business establishments in the North of England start accepting both Sterling and Euros? Will invoices routinely show both Sterling and Euro values? Will excise and duty rates be similar to the UK? Will there be opportunities for enterprising individuals to take advantage of any differences? Will we see smugglers coming up against modern day Robert Burns in his Exciseman incarnation? At what rate will the Scots set VAT? Will it be possible that cross border VAT rate shopping will take place? Will the Scots lose the zero rating reliefs which they currently enjoy as part of the UK? Will the Scottish people be forced to pay VAT on new houses, food, books and children’s clothing after independence? One thing is for sure, the Scots will need a whole new set of domestic legislation to cover VAT and indirect taxes.

Also: What about groups of companies with Scottish and English subsidiaries currently in the same UK VAT Group? Were independence to happen, it would be a riot unpicking that lot.

Good luck everybody!

What VAT CAN’T you claim?

By   4 September 2014

The majority of input tax incurred by most VAT registered businesses may be recovered.  However, there is some input tax that may not be.  I thought it would be helpful if I pulled together all of these categories in one place:

Blocked VAT ClaimsWebsite Images0006

A brief overview

  •  No supporting evidence

In most cases this evidence will be an invoice (or as the rules state “a proper tax invoice)” although it may be import, self-billing or other documentation in specific circumstances.  A claim is invalid without the correct paperwork.  HMRC may accept alternative evidence, however, they are not duty bound to do so (and rarely do).  So ensure that you always obtain and retain the correct documentation.

  • Incorrect supporting evidence

Usually this is an invalid invoice, or using a delivery note/statement/pro forma in place of a proper tax invoice. To support a claim an invoice must show all the information set out in the legislation.  HMRC are within their rights to disallow a claim if any of the details are missing.  A full guide is here: https://www.marcusward.co/vat-invoices-a-full-guide/

  •  Input tax relating to exempt supplies

Broadly speaking, if a business incurs VAT in respect of exempt supplies it cannot recover it.  If a business makes only exempt supplies it cannot even register for VAT.  There is a certain easement called de minimis which provide for recovery if the input tax is below certain prescribed limits. Input tax which relates to both exempt and taxable activities must be apportioned. More details of partial exemption may be found here: https://www.marcusward.co/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/Partial-Exemption-Guide.pdf

  •  Input tax relating to non-business activities

If a charity or NFP entity incurs input tax in connection with non-business activities this cannot be recovered and there is no de minimis relief.  Input tax which relates to both business and non-business activities must be apportioned. Business versus non-business apportionment must be carried out first and then any partial exemption calculation for the business element if appropriate. More details here: https://www.marcusward.co/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/Charities-and-Not-For-Profit-Entities-A-Brief-VAT-Guide.pdf

  •  Time barred

If input tax is not reclaimed within four years of it being incurred, the capping provisions apply and any claim will be rejected by HMRC.

  •  VAT incurred on business entertainment

This is always irrecoverable unless the client or customer being entertained belongs overseas.  The input tax incurred on staff entertainment costs is however recoverable.

  •  Car purchase

In most cases the VAT incurred on the purchase of a car is blocked. The only exceptions are for when the car; is part of the stock in trade of a motor manufacturer or dealer, or is used primarily for the purposes of taxi hire; self-drive hire or driving instruction; or is used exclusively for a business purpose and is not made available for private use. This last category is notoriously difficult to prove to HMRC and the evidence to support this must be very good.

  •  Car leasing

If a business leases a car for business purposes it will normally be unable to recover 50% of the VAT charged.  The 50% block is to cover the private use of the car.

  •  A business using certain schemes

For instance, a business using the Flat rate Scheme cannot recover input tax except for certain large capital purchases, also there are certain blocks for recovery on TOMS users

  •  VAT charged in error

Even if you obtain an invoice purporting to show a VAT amount, this cannot be recovered if the VAT was charged in error; either completely inappropriately or at the wrong rate.  A business’ recourse is with the supplier and not HMRC.

  •  Goods and services not used for your business

Even if a business has an invoice addressed to it and the services or goods are paid for by the business, the input tax on the purchase is blocked if the supply is not for business use.  This may be because the purchase is for personal use, or by anther business or for purposes not related to the business.

  • VAT paid on goods and services obtained before VAT registration

This is not input tax and therefore is not claimable.  However, there are exceptions for goods on hand at registration and services received within six months of registration if certain conditions are met.

  •  VAT incurred by property developers

Input tax incurred on certain articles that are installed in buildings which are sold or leased at the zero rate is blocked.

  •  Second hand goods

Goods sold to you under one of the VAT second-hand schemes will not show a separate VAT charge and no input tax is recoverable on these goods.

  •  Transfer of a going concern (TOGC)

Assets of a business transferred to you as a going concern are not deemed to be a supply for VAT purposes and consequently, there is no VAT chargeable and therefore no input tax to recover.

  •  Disbursements

A business cannot reclaim VAT when it pays for goods or services to be supplied directly to its client. However, in this situation the VAT may be claimable by the client if they are VAT registered. For more on disbursements see here: https://www.marcusward.co/disbursements-vat/

  •  VAT incurred overseas

A business cannot reclaim VAT charged on goods or services that it has bought from suppliers in other EC States. Only UK VAT may be claimed on a UK VAT return. There is however, a mechanism available to claim this VAT back from the relevant VAT body in those States. However, in most cases, supplies received from overseas suppliers are VAT free, so it is usually worth checking whether any VAT has been charged correctly.

© Marcus Ward Consultancy Ltd

Disbursements – VAT

By   5 August 2014

One of the most common queries regarding VAT is “my client passes on charges incurred on behalf of his customer, does he add VAT?”  In other words, does the payment qualify as a disbursement?

Does it matter if the original supply has VAT on it?

Yes. Whether a payment is a disbursement is only a practical issue if the charge involved is initially VAT free since, if it were VATable, there would be no benefit to the final customer in passing the charge on “in the same state”.  The points below assume that the charge in question is VAT free, eg; statutory fees (land registry, stamp duty, search fees, MOTs etc) insurance, financial products etc although benefits may also be obtained if the original supply is reduced rated.

So only if a supply is a disbursement can I pass it on in the “same state; ie; VAT free?

Yes

So when can I pass on a payment VAT free? 

A disbursement is passed on without any alteration (eg; not marked up or changed in any way) and the supply must be to the final customer by the original provider.  If the supply is VAT free then the recovery of the costs is also VAT free.  The passing on of the payment from the final customer to the supplier is done as agent.  Therefore, in these circumstances, a supplier may be acting as principal for part of a supply, and agent for another part.  The disbursement should not appear on the “agent’s” VAT return.

When do I have to add VAT onto a supply which is originally VAT free?

When the onward supply is not a disbursement.

A distinction must be drawn between a necessary cost component of a supplier making a supply and a disbursement.  An example is zero-rated travel.  A supplier may incur a train fare in providing his service, but that is a cost component for him and not a disbursement, so VAT would be added to any onward charge.  It is clear that the supplier is not actually supplying train travel to his customer, but is consuming the cost in providing his overall VATable service.

What are the rules for treating a payment as a disbursement?

The following criteria must be met by a supplier to establish whether it qualifies as a disbursement:

  • you acted as the agent of your client when you paid the third party;
  • your client actually received and used the goods or services provided by the third party;
  • your client was responsible for paying the third party;
  • your client authorised you to make the payment on their behalf;
  • your client knew that the goods or services you paid for would be provided by a third party;
  • your outlay will be separately itemised when you invoice your client;
  • you recover only the exact amount which you paid to the third party; and
  • the goods or services, which you paid for, are clearly additional to the supplies which you make to your client on your own account.

Please contact us if you have any queries on this matter.  Sometimes the matter is less than straightforward and getting it wrong can be very expensive for a business. If you have been charged VAT on what you believe to be a VAT free disbursement, it may also be worth challenging your supplier.

For full details and diagrams please see here

VAT – Land and Property Issues

By   23 May 2014

Help!

Supplies relating to property may be, or have been; 20%, 17.5%, 15.%, 5%, zero-rated, exempt, or outside the scope of VAT – all impacting, in different ways, upon the VAT position of a supplier and customer. In addition, the law permits certain exempt supplies to be changed to 20% without the agreement of the customer. As soon as a supplier is provided with a choice, there is a chance of making the wrong one! Even very slight differences in circumstances may result in a different and potentially unexpected VAT outcome, and it is an unfortunate fact of business life that VAT cannot be ignored.

Why is VAT important?

The fact that the rules are complex, ever-changing, and the amounts involved in property transactions are usually high means that there is an increased risk of making errors. These often result in large penalties and interest payments plus unwanted attentions from the VAT man. Uncertainty regarding VAT may affect budgets and an unforeseen VAT bill (and additional SDLT) may risk the profitability of a venture.

Problem areas

Certain transactions tend to create more VAT issues than others. These include; whether a property sale can qualify as a VAT free Transfer Of a Going Concern, supplies involving Listed property and conversions of properties from commercial to residential use, whether to opt to a commercial property, the recovery of VAT charged on a property purchase, supplies between landlord and tenants, the Capital Goods Scheme, HMRC anti-avoidance rules and even seemingly straightforward VAT registration. Additionally, the VAT treatment of building services throws up its own set of VAT complications.

VAT Planning

The usual adage is “right tax, right time”. This, more often than not, means considering the VAT treatment of a transaction well in advance of that transaction taking place. Unfortunately, with VAT there is usually very little planning that can be done after the event. For peace of mind a consultation with me can steer you through the complexities and, if there are issues, to minimise the impact of VAT on a project. Assistance of a VAT adviser is usually crucial if there are any disputes with VAT inspectors.

For more information, please see our Land & Property services

Oops! Top Ten VAT howlers

By   8 May 2014

I am often asked what the most frequent VAT errors made by a business are. I usually reply along the lines of “a general poor understanding of VAT, considering the tax too late or just plain missing a VAT issue”.

While this is unquestionably true, a little further thought results in this top ten list of VAT horrors:

1 Not considering that HMRC may be wrong. There is a general assumption that HMRC know what they are doing. While this is true in most cases, the complexity and fast moving nature of the tax can often catch an inspector out. Added to this is the fact that in most cases inspectors refer to HMRC guidance (which is HMRC’s interpretation of the law) rather to the legislation itself. Reference to the legislation isn’t always straightforward either, as often EC rather than UK domestic legislation is cited to support an analysis. The moral to the story is that tax is complicated for the regulator as well, and no business should feel fearful or reticent about challenging a HMRC decision.

2 Missing a VAT issue altogether. A lot of errors are as a result of VAT not being considered at all. This is usually in relation to unusual or one-off transactions (particularly land and property or sales of businesses). Not recognising a VAT “triggerpoint” can result in an unexpected VAT bill, penalties and interest, plus a possible reduction of income of 20% or an added 20% in costs. Of course, one of the basic howlers is not registering at the correct time. Beware the late registration penalty, plus even more stringent penalties if HMRC consider that not registering has been done deliberately.

3 Not considering alternative structures. If VAT is looked at early enough, there is very often ways to avoid VAT representing a cost. Even if this is not possible, there may be ways of mitigating a VAT hit.

4 Assuming that all transactions with overseas customers are VAT free. There is no “one size fits all” treatment for cross border transactions. There are different rules for goods and services and a vast array of different rules for different services. The increase in trading via the internet has only added to the complexity in this area, and with new technology only likely to increase the rate of new types of supply it is crucial to consider the implications of tax; in the UK and elsewhere.

5 Leaving VAT planning to the last minute. VAT is time sensitive and it is not usually possible to plan retrospectively. Once an event has occurred it is normally too late to amend any transactions or structures. VAT shouldn’t wag the commercial dog, but failure to deal with it at the right time may be either a deal-breaker or a costly mistake.

6 Getting the option to tax wrong. Opting to tax is one area of VAT where a taxpayer has a choice. This affords the possibility of making the wrong choice, for whatever reasons. Not opting to tax when beneficial, or opting when it is detrimental can hugely impact on the profitability of a project. Not many businesses can carry the cost of, say, not being able to recover VAT on the purchase of a property, or not being able to recover input tax on a big refurbishment. Additionally, seeing expected income being reduced by 20% will usually wipe out any profit in a transaction.

Not realising a business is partly exempt. For a business, exemption is a VAT cost, not a relief. Apart from the complexity of partial exemption, a partly exempt business will not be permitted to reclaim all of the input tax it incurs and this represents an actual cost. In fact, a business which only makes exempt supplies will not be able to VAT register, so all input tax will be lost. There is a lot of planning that may be employed for partly exempt businesses and not taking advantage of this often creates additional VAT costs.

8 Relying on the partial exemption standard method to the business’ disadvantage. A partly exempt business has the opportunity to consider many methods to calculate irrecoverable input tax. The default method, the “standard method” often provides an unfair and costly result. I recommend that any partly exempt business obtains a review of its activities from a specialist. I have been able to save significant amounts for clients simply by agreeing an alternative partial exemption method with HMRC.

Not taking advantage of the available reliefs. There are a range of reliefs available, if one knows where to look. From Bad Debt Relief, Zero Rating (VAT nirvana!) and certain de minimis limits to charity reliefs and the Flat Rate Scheme, there are a number of easements and simplifications which could save a business money and reduce administrative and time costs.

10 Forgetting the impact of the Capital Goods Scheme. The range of costs covered by this scheme has been expanded recently. Broadly, VAT incurred on certain expenditure is required to be adjusted over a five or ten year period. Failure to recognise this could either result in assessments and penalties, or a position whereby input tax has been under-claimed.

So, you may ask: “How do I make sure that I avoid these VAT pitfalls?” – And you would be right to ask.

Of course, I would recommend that you engage a VAT specialist to help reduce the exposure to VAT costs!