ÑÇÖÞÉ«ÇéÍø

VAT registration ― voluntary

Produced by a Tolley Value Added Tax expert
Value Added Tax
Guidance

VAT registration ― voluntary

Produced by a Tolley Value Added Tax expert
Value Added Tax
Guidance
imgtext

This guidance note provides the following information regarding VAT registration on a voluntary basis:

  1. •

    when it is possible

  2. •

    reasons why it may be appropriate

  3. •

    practical points to consider

For in-depth commentary on the legislation and case law concerning voluntary VAT registration, please refer to De Voil Indirect Tax Service V2.144–V2.146.

For guidance about the process of registering for VAT, please refer to the VAT registration procedure guidance note.

The Input tax ― overview guidance note includes guidance on the rules for claiming VAT on costs incurred prior to the date of VAT registration.

The Flowchart ― VAT registration ― compulsory or voluntary is intended to provide an overview of when UK VAT registration may be required on a compulsory basis or may be available on a voluntary basis. The flowchart does not, however, reflect all of the points covered in this guidance note and the VAT registration ― compulsory guidance note and it should be used in conjunction with both of these guidance notes.

When can a person register for VAT voluntarily?

If

Continue reading the full document
To gain access to additional expert tax guidance, workflow tools, generative tax AI, and tax research, register for a free trial of Tolley+â„¢
Powered by

Popular Articles

Spouse exemption from inheritance tax

Spouse exemption from inheritance taxArguably, the most important inheritance tax exemption is the spouse exemption from inheritance tax.There is no IHT to pay on gifts from husband to wife and vice versa, or from one civil partner to the other (referred to collectively in this note as ‘spouses’).

14 Jul 2020 13:56 | Produced by Tolley in association with Emma Haley at Boodle Hatfield LLP Read more Read more

Trade or hobby

Trade or hobbyInteraction of hobby farming rules and commercialityFarming has its own set of ‘hobby farming rules’, which historically have stated that a profit must be made every six years. This is known as ‘the five-year rule’, in that there can be five years of losses but there must be a profit

14 Jul 2020 13:50 | Produced by Tolley Read more Read more

Class 4 national insurance contributions

Class 4 national insurance contributionsWhat is Class 4 NIC?Class 2 and Class 4 national insurance contributions (NIC) are paid by self-employed individuals and partners in a partnership on their profits arising within the UK. This guidance note considers Class 4 contributions. For Class 2

14 Jul 2020 11:13 | Produced by Tolley Read more Read more