helping you help your clients VAT Update Neil Owen BA CTA(Fellow) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
helping you help your clients VAT Update Neil Owen BA CTA(Fellow) FBIAC AIIT Brexit HMRC guidance published re no deal Confirms main points No change to most services But no EC Sales Lists (or narratives on invoices)
helping you help your clients VAT Update Neil Owen BA CTA(Fellow) FBIAC AIIT
Brexit • HMRC guidance published re no deal • Confirms main points • No change to most services – But no EC Sales Lists (or narratives on invoices) • Acquisitions become imports – Postponed accounting • EC sales and distance sales become exports – Evidential requirements • MOSS – overseas registration required
Place of Supply • Where a supply is seen as taking place – Where VAT is chargeable on a sale – Only place where VAT chargeable – Not quite only place where VAT may need to be brought to account • Rules differ for goods and services • For goods, where they start their journey to the customer • For services, more complex
Place of Supply of Services • Land-related – Taxed where land is located – Hotel accommodation – Construction services – Architects, estate agents, etc – Conveyancing solicitors – Supplies of land – Holiday accommodation – Direct link with specific site
Other Services • Passenger transport – Mile for mile, where journey takes place • Admission to events – Where event takes place – Wide definition – Services ancillary to admission
Other Services 2 • Restaurant services and catering – Where services consumed – Hopefully self-explanatory • Short-term hire of a means of transport – Period of hire no more than 30 days – 90 days for a vessel – Where made available, not where used • Freight transport outside EU
Other Services 3 • Services affected by the override – Hire of goods – Telecoms and broadcasting – Electronically-supplied services • Electronically-delivered files • Web-hosting • Automated web services • Taxed where ‘use and enjoyment’ occurs if different from customer location – Only if one EU and one non-EU
B2B Services: the General Rule • Default position B2B for all other services • Known as ‘general rule’ • VAT due in customer’s location • All services bar designated exceptions • ‘Business’ includes VAT -registered • No VAT chargeable if customer overseas • Reverse charge due if supplier overseas • So nothing changes post-Brexit
General rule services B2B • UK supplier – No VAT chargeable if customer overseas and in business (or otherwise VAT- registered in EU) • UK customer – VAT due in UK – Customer liable to account – Reverse charge must be applied
The Reverse Charge • Applies where place of supply is customer’s location • VAT must be brought to account there • Avoids need for supplier to register • Customer accounts for VAT – Treats services as both supplied and received
The Reverse Charge 2 • Applies to services received into UK • Supplier may be EU or non-EU • Account in boxes 1 and 6 of return, as well as 4 (to extent claimable) and 7 • From 1 January 2010, all services except exclusions • Applies only to taxable services
B2C Services • Many “where performed” so no change post-Brexit • Many where supplier established so no change post-Brexit • Some where customer belongs if non-EU – Accountancy, consultancy, provision of information, supplies of staff • Some where customer belongs if in EU – BTE services (MOSS accounting)
Imports • Shipment of goods non-EU to EU • VAT a tax on importation • Chargeable as a duty of customs • Payable on goods subject to VAT • Normal input tax • C79 certificate evidence • Not agent's invoice
Exports • Shipment of goods EU to non-EU • Zero-rated regardless of customer • Ship and get evidence within 3 months • Supplier must ship – Except indirect exports • Indirect exports – Customer not established in UK – Caution with evidence
Export Evidence • Required by law • Official – C88 • Commercial – Primary or secondary • For sea, sea waybill of bill of lading • For air, air waybill • For post, certificate of posting • Within three months
Timing of Export Evidence • Musashi Autoparts Europe Limited • Sales to Germany • Insufficient evidence of shipment • C&E assess • Company obtains evidence • C&E refuse to withdraw asst, saying next return can be adjusted • Tribunal allows appeal • Overturned by High Court
EORI Numbers • All importers and exporters require EORI number • Application made on first import or export • Those dealing with EU need post-Brexit – Only if none already • Separate method of application – No evidence needed • HMRC were sending letters
Acquisitions 1 • Purchase by VAT-registered trader of goods from EU • Goods must move across border • VAT accounted for by customer – on standard- and reduced-rated goods • Claimed as input tax subject to normal rules – Caution where input tax irrecoverable
Acquisitions 2 • Customer provides VAT number to supplier, including country prefix • Acquisitions over threshold can cause registration • High values give rise to statistical obligations
EC Sales • Goods sold to a VAT-registered customer elsewhere in the EU • Goods must move • Customer must be registered in MS of acquisition (except triangulation) • Supplier must obtain customer VAT no. and quote on invoice • Evidential requirements • Transfer of own goods counts
Distance Selling • Sales to unregistered customers in EU • Initially as UK • If threshold exceeded in any MS, registration required • Higher threshold ( € 100k): Austria, Germany, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, the UK • Lower threshold ( € 35k): all others
MTD for VAT • HMRC VAT Notice 700/22 – Revised May 2019 – Also “stakeholder information pack” • Monthly and annual returns – Confirmed will continue • Ditto non-standard tax periods • Loss of seven-day extension? • Will accommodate FRS
MTD for VAT 2 • Principles are threefold – Digital retention of records – Digital links between accounting records – Digital submission of VAT returns • Liability exists if trading above VAT threshold – Taxable supplies only
Liability to MTD • Taxable supplies >£85,000 – i.e. standard-, zero- and reduced-rated – Same threshold for overseas businesses • Those voluntarily registered not liable • Intending traders not liable • Exclude exempt supplies and supplies outside scope of UK VAT – E.g. sales of services to businesses outside UK
Liability to MTD 2 • First VAT period beginning after 31.3.19 – For 96.5% (per HMRC) of those liable • First VAT period beginning after 1.10.2019 – Trusts and unincorporated not-for-profit bodies – Group VAT registrations (and divisional) – Overseas businesses – Annual accounting scheme users – Public corporations – Local authorities and public sector bodies
Liability to MTD 3 • If below at 1 April 2019, must commence wef beginning of first period after t/o exceeded – On historical basis – Need to monitor – Cannot get back out of t/o decreases • Those below threshold can participate voluntarily – Can get back out if still below
Digital Records • Certain records must be kept digitally – List in notes – Manual records only will be illegal • Cash accounting permissible – Payment date may be used as supply date – Issues with cash book records – Single entry for multiple purchases permissible but conditions • No requirement for electronic invoicing
Digital Records 2 • Many will use standardised accounting packages – May be HMRC’s unpublished aim • Spreadsheets count as digital records • Manual entry of transactions – Prime entry into digital records – Invoices, cash payments, etc – Results of specialised calculations
Digital Records 3 • For retailers, DGT item of prime entry – No requirement for digital record of individual transactions – EPOS will not need to link to other digital records • Also, where intermediary agents arrange transactions – Summary of transactions may be entered into digital accounting system
Digital Records 4 • Other records may be manual – Includes specialised computations, such as • partial exemption calculations • margin scheme records • error correction computations • FRS calculation • scale charge records • employee expenses • petty cash records (monetary limits) – Result entered manually (by journal) • But will need to be prior to submission
Digital Links • Links between accounting systems must be digital • This element postponed for 12 months – From main entry date • Will require systems to talk to each other – Export, upload, etc – Pages of an Excel spreadsheet – No manual intervention
Digital Links 2 • Issues for VAT groups, academy schools, large businesses with multiple accounting systems, etc • All parts must link digitally – Often a spreadsheet is used • No legislative definition of “digital link” – HMRC insist “copy and paste” not a digital link
Digital Submission of Returns • Software must talk to HMRC’s systems – Both to submit and to receive data • API (application program interface) or bridge required – Main software providers will facilitate – Others will need bridging program • Older versions of accounting software – Download to Excel and submit from that?
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