On 26 January 2026, the UK Supreme Court ruled that VAT incurred on adviser fees for an exempt share sale is not recoverable. The decision applies a strict two‑stage test, rejecting the modified approach that allowed recovery based on intended use of proceeds. The ruling closes the possibility of treating such costs as general overheads to fund taxable activities.
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Cumbria Crack · about 15 hours ago
The UK government’s Great British Summer Savings initiative introduces a temporary VAT reduction from 20% to 5% on certain children’s meals and family-focused activities from 25 June to 1 September 2026. Businesses must identify qualifying supplies, review pricing, adjust bundled offers, and update booking and accounting systems to manage mixed VAT treatments and potential advance‑booking adjustments.
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Irish News · 7 days ago
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Greater Birmingham Chambers of Commerce · 16 days ago
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Museums Association · 16 days ago
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Key Takeaways
The Court confirmed that VAT incurred on adviser fees connected with an exempt share sale is not recoverable.
The Court established a strict two‑stage test: first, assess whether costs have a direct and immediate link to a specific transaction; if not, consider whether they relate to the taxpayer's general economic activity.
No, the Court rejected the modified approach that permitted recovery based on the intended use of the proceeds.
The ruling closes the door on treating such costs as general overheads, confirming they are linked to the exempt transaction and thus not recoverable.
Primary source
Read the full article at ProskauerThis summary was published on VATfaqs.com on 26 January 2026. It relates to VAT developments in United Kingdom. The original source is Proskauer.