This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience. Please read our policies for more information.

10 Chartered Accountants

News

Tax experts back change on digital firms
06 January 2015

Tax experts have welcomed a government move that will prevent thousands of small businesses needing to register for European VAT from having to charge customers UK VAT, provided their relevant turnover remains below the £81,000 threshold.

HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) has adopted a proposal from the Chartered Institute of Taxation (CIOT) to amend its VAT Mini One Stop Shop (MOSS) scheme so that businesses operating below the VAT threshold can now separate sales to UK customers from sales to other EU customers.

Under EU regulations that came into effect on 1 January, VAT on digital services is now chargeable in the location of the consumer rather than of the provider. This meant sellers of digital products such as e-books and online courses having to register for VAT in up to 27 EU member states unless they use MOSS.

However, to use MOSS in the UK, businesses had to be locally VAT-registered, making their entire turnover subject to VAT and effectively excluding them from the benefit of the UK registration threshold, even where they supplied a minimal amount of digital services to European consumers.

HMRC announced on 10 December that businesses with turnover below the VAT registration threshold would be able to register for MOSS in the UK and maintain the benefit of the VAT threshold for UK supplies.

CIOT tax policy director Patrick Stevens said: “There was vociferous rejection of the initial proposals, particularly from smaller businesses for whom the removal of the UK VAT exemption would have defeated the very point of MOSS, since the amount of VAT they would pay on their domestic turnover would likely have been greater than the cost of the services they would provide in another state.

“In most cases, they would have opted not to apply for MOSS but simply register to pay VAT in the state in which the particular service is being provided. We are happy to see that the Revenue has adopted a common sense approach.”

Link: Registering for and using the VAT MOSS

Other recent news

HMRC’s bookkeeping shake-up: New rules for 2025 and beyond!
13 January 2025

As the 2025/26 tax year approaches, it brings several significant…
Read more

Confusion on savings interest – HMRC weighs in
13 January 2025

HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) has clarified that if your…
Read more

Become an eco-conscious business – Taking advantage of Climate Change Agreements
13 January 2025

Taking advantage of green tax reliefs is a good way…
Read more

Sole traders – Is there a benefit to van ownership?
13 January 2025

As a sole trader, it is only natural to look…
Read more

What are the risks with directors’ loans?
13 January 2025

A director’s loan is money taken out of a company…
Read more

»

Case Studies