The article explains how the place of supply rules for travel services differ from standard B2B and B2C rules, highlighting key exceptions such as accommodation, transport, restaurants and event admission. It details how the Tour Operators Margin Scheme (TOMS) shifts the place of supply to the supplier’s location, offering potential VAT savings for UK and non‑UK businesses. Practical examples illustrate how different scenarios can change whether UK VAT is due.
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Electrifying · about 18 hours ago
The UK Treasury has appealed a tax tribunal decision that ruled public electric vehicle charge points should be subject to 5% VAT. The tribunal had determined that public charge points fall within the domestic electricity supply VAT cut, but the government is contesting this. The appeal was lodged within the 56‑day deadline.
Law360 · 6 days ago
A UK court decision allows a travel agency to contest HM Revenue & Customs’ trimming of its VAT credit by approximately £187,000. The ruling spiked the tax authority’s bid for an early end to the case, giving the agency the right to pursue a full challenge. The case highlights the importance of monitoring HMRC adjustments and the potential for judicial review.
FE Week · 19 days ago
The Court of Appeal has ruled in favour of Colchester Institute in a VAT dispute with HMRC, allowing the college to reclaim VAT on pre‑2010 capital projects. The decision could extend to an estimated 20‑30 other colleges and raises uncertainty for charities that may lose VAT discounts. The ruling centres on the Lennartz mechanism, which HMRC had withdrawn in 2010.
Law360 · 26 days ago
A London court ruled that a technical college receiving free courses funded by the UK government must treat the funding as consideration for its taxable supply of services, making it subject to VAT that can be recovered from HMRC. The decision clarifies the tax treatment of government funding for educational services. The ruling was issued on March 27, 2026.
The VAT Team · 26 days ago
The article explains how place of supply rules determine VAT treatment for cross‑border services, outlining B2B and B2C rules, land‑related exceptions, and the importance of identifying place of supply to avoid compliance issues. It also highlights that UK VAT applies if the place of supply is the UK, and that non‑established businesses face a nil registration threshold.
GOV.UK · 28 days ago
The UK government’s Simplified Customs Declaration Process (SCDP) offers a two‑stage electronic declaration method that reduces border controls for authorised traders. Importers must be pre‑authorised, hold an EORI number, and submit a supplementary declaration within ten calendar days of the reporting period’s end, keeping records for four years.
For B2B customers, the place of supply is where the customer is established.
Under TOMS, the place of supply is where the supplier is located, regardless of where the service takes place.
Accommodation is an exception where the place of supply is where the property is located.
Yes, if the services qualify for TOMS criteria, the place of supply can shift to Ireland, eliminating UK VAT.
This summary was published on VATfaqs.com on 24 March 2026. It relates to VAT developments in United Kingdom. The original source is LinkedIn Article by Laura Chipp.