Value Added Tax (VAT)
Key rates
|
|
From 014.04.07 |
From
01.04.08 |
|
Standard rate |
17.5% |
17.5% |
|
VAT fraction |
7/47 |
7/47 |
|
Reduced rate |
5% |
5% |
|
Annual registration limit |
£64,000 |
£67,000 |
|
De-registration limit |
£62,000 |
£65,000 |
The
increase in the taxable turnover threshold means that a person will have
to apply for registration if:
-
at the end
of any month, the value of the taxable supplies made in the past 12
months or less has exceeded £67,000; or
-
at any time
there are reasonable grounds for believing that the value of the
taxable supplies to be made in the next 30 days alone will exceed
£67,000.
The reduced rate applies to:
-
Children’s car seats
-
Contraceptive products
-
Domestic fuel or power
-
Energy-saving materials:
installation
-
Heating equipment, security goods
and gas supplies: grant-funded installation or connection
-
Installation of mobility aids for
the elderly
-
Residential renovations and
alterations
-
Residential conversions
-
Smoking cessation products
-
Welfare advice or information
-
Women’s sanitary products
Fuel scale charges
Businesses
which recover input tax on fuel used for private motoring must account
for VAT according to a scale charge where fuel is put to a private use.
New scale charges apply from 1 May 2008, which must be used the from the
start of the next prescribed accounting period beginning on or after
that date. The changes are made to reflect changes in fuel prices. Also
amended is the table of CO2
bands to maintain alignment with those used for direct
tax purposes. Details are to be
Notice in Notice 700/64 on the HMRC website.
The scale
charge for a particular vehicle is determined by its CO2
emissions figure. Where the CO2
emissions figure of a vehicle is not a multiple of five,
the figure is rounded down to the next multiple of five to determine the
level of charge. For a bi-fuel vehicle which has two CO2
emissions figures, the lower of the two figures should be
used. For cars which are too old to have a CO2
emissions figure HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) have
prescribed a level of emissions by reference to the vehicle’s
engine capacity (cc).
8th and 13th Directive Claims