VAT ruling affects salary sacrifice schemes
HMRC has clarified its position on the VAT treatment of employee benefits
HMRC has clarified its position on the VAT treatment of employee benefits
In Partnership With
SALARY SACRIFICED by employees in exchange for a benefit will be treated as consideration for VAT purposes following a HM Revenue & Customs briefing paper clarifying its position.
In 2010, in a case involving pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) decided that salary sacrificed by employees, in exchange for retail vouchers provided by their employer, was consideration for VAT purposes. This would affect employers that operated flexible benefits, such as the cycle to work scheme.
An HMRC update confirmed that the taxman would treat the salary sacrificed as consideration for VAT from 1 January 2012. Where the benefit is liable to VAT, then input VAT is recoverable as under normal rules but output tax will be due on the amount of salary sacrificed. According to the brief, if the benefit is of higher value to the salary sacrificed, the higher amount will be subject to VAT.
Mark Groom, tax partner at Deloitte, said that employers would have to make decisions about whether they or their employers would have to bear the cost. He added: “If the employer is not prepared to bear this cost: [it must]: review scheme design and amend terms to cover the increased VAT cost going forward; and review existing agreements with employees and decide whether benefits and/or salary sacrifice amounts should and can be amended for the balance of the period of any existing agreements.”
The numbers you crunch tell a story. Your expertis...
14yEmbracing user-friendly AP systems can turn the tide, streamlining workflows, enhancing compliance, and opening doors to early payment discounts. Read...
View articleOrganisations can enhance their financial operations' efficiency, accuracy, and responsiveness by adopting platforms that offer them self-service cust...
View articleIn a world of instant results and automated workloads, the potential for AP to drive insights and transform results is enormous. But, if you’re still ...
View resourceDiscover how AP dashboards can transform your business by enhancing efficiency and accuracy in tracking key metrics, as revealed by the latest insight...
View articleUK landowners face both opportunity and risk when shifting land from agriculture to development. In this article, Naomi Stewart, Head of Tax at Shaw G...
View articleHMRC has officially ruled out plans to introduce Making Tax Digital for Corporation Tax, confirming the shift in its July 2025 Transformation Roadmap....
View articleThe UK tax gap held steady at 5.3% in 2023–24, translating to £46.8 billion in unpaid taxes, according to the latest HMRC statistics. While the percen...
View articleUK small businesses are facing an annual tax compliance burden nearing £25 billion, according to recent findings by the Federation of Small Businesses...
View articleBusinesses across the UK should prepare for several significant tax changes coming into effect from 6 April 2025, according to the ICAEW. While some o...
View articleBusinesses that have relied on the joint online filing service for Company Tax Returns and accounts submissions will need to find alternative solution...
View articleFive years on from Brexit, small and medium-sized businesses continue to face challenges from its tax and trade implications. It was hugely divisive, ...
View articleAs the Spring Budget approaches, dissenters of the UK government’s increasingly complex contractor legislation are baying for change. HMRC has already...
View article