The Flat Rate for VAT Scheme was introduced by the Government to simplify the VAT rules for small businesses. If you have reasonable grounds to believe the value of your business’s taxable supplies in the next 12 months will be less than £150,000 (exclusive of VAT), your company is eligible to account for VAT using the flat rate scheme.
All invoices under the flat rate scheme continue to be raised with VAT charged at the appropriate rate, but the way in which a business accounts for VAT to HMRC changes. Instead of working out your output against your input VAT on a quarterly return you select from a list published by HMRC, a percentage based upon the category of business into which your company’s activity falls. This percentage is then applied to the company’s VAT inclusive turnover. This value is what the business accounts for to HMRC in each VAT quarter.
Your business invoices and receives VAT at the standard rate but pays VAT calculated at its flat rate percentage to HMRC. A business in its first year of VAT registration is allowed an additional 1% reduction on its percentage rate lasting for one year from the VAT effective date.
However, from 1ST April 2017, we explain the changes that will make the adoption of the flat rate scheme less attractive and therefore the standard rate VAT scheme more appropriate for your business.
The Government believes that some trades have unfairly benefited from using the Flat Rate Scheme, particularly small businesses with low costs (such as contractors), and hopes that a change to the way the Flat Rate Scheme is calculated “will help level the playing field, while maintaining the accounting simplification for the small businesses that use the scheme as intended.”
As announced in The Autumn budget, from 1st April 2017, so-called ‘limited cost traders’ will use a new 16.5% rate when calculating their FRS liabilities. All other businesses will continue to use the current percentages used by HMRC.
So, contractors who meet the definition of limited cost traders will be obliged to pay more in additional VAT liabilities in the year.
According to the HMRC technical note, a Limited cost trader will be defined as one whose VAT inclusive expenditure on goods is either:
To prevent businesses including everyday purchases, such as goods, to increase their costs above the 2% threshold, for the purposes of this measure, goods must be used exclusively for the purpose of the business. However, this excludes the following items: