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If you had to arrange the repair yourself, you would use an established contractor and they would charge you net + VAT, so the VAT sticks with you in that scenario,
In your position, the managing agent is required to perform the repair, so they engage with the same contractor, contractor charges agent VAT, agent reclaims this VAT and then recharges the costs of the contractor onto you as net + VAT, as they bought in the contractor services, paid him and now recharging back to you, they are making an onward supply to you, you end up in exactly the same position as if you had hired the contractor yourself directly.
Nobody is making any profit, except if the managing agent adds a small admin fee on top of the contractors fees.
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Are you a UK based business or are you non-resident/based overseas?
HMRC do not issue VAT exemption letters, you need to discuss with eBay as to why they are asking for something that HMRC do not do.
eBay regularly ask merchants for this exemption letter, there is no exemption letter so go back to eBay and ask them to clarify what they mean.
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Place of supply of services rules did not change post brexit.
Your customer is a UK business , therefore place of your supply is where the customer is, customer accounts for VAT under reverse charge in the UK, you (in Sweden) make an outside the scope of VAT supply on your Swedish return (no VAT to declare in Sweden and with no requirement to register for VAT in the UK.
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Visit this link
https://www.gov.uk/vat-repayments#:~:text=You%20must%20fill%20in%20a,or%20update%20your%20bank%20details.
Scroll down to the bottom section "repayments to an overseas bank account" and there is a link to "fil in a form", click that link and you are taken to your government gateway login screen, log into your government gateway and the form will then appear, asking you details of your EU bank, IBAN, etc.
You cannot change the bank details via the normal government gateway link, that is designed only for UK bank details (sort code/account number), there is no facility to input an IBAN or BIC....but follow the instructions above and you can update using an IBAN, HMRC process these forms manually and so takes 2-3 days for confirmation.
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Whilst waiting for HMRC's reply, my initial view is that : Is the contractor installing an energy saving system?
In your scenario, is the contractor installing energy saving materials (ESM) or are they simply removing existing ESM, doing something to your roof and then putting back the ESM and whilst doing so, adding a few extra panels?
If the panels have to be removed to repair a leaking roof, the primary purpose here is to fix the leak/replace the tiles, to facilitate that the contractor has to remove the panels, fix the leak and put the panels back, so you need to look at why the panels are being removed in the first place, because that is the motivation/driving factor here.
I don't automatically agree with the suggestion that you have to buy an inverter in order to qualify, the inverter is but one component of what is a multi-component system (panels, framework, inverter, possible boarding of the loft, battery, etc) but it is a bit more nuanced than that. The question is whether or not the project is the installing of energy saving materials or merely the removing of them to get access to the roof for some other reason/job?
If we assume the panels have been removed to say fix a leaky roof (remove panels, fix tiles/leak, put back panels), the job is clearly one of fixing a leak and the whole job would be standard rated, removing the panels is necessary to access the roof tiles, that's the only reason the panels are being removed. Putting the panels back is not re-installing an energy saving system, it was already installed beforehand.
In your scenario, you seem to be suggesting that you have extended your solar panel system by adding more panels at the same time as having some refurbishment work done, lets assume those works are to fix a leaking roof/get the roof repaired. Let's say you had a 10 panel system before and then after they were removed to fix the leak, the contractor is installing 5 additional panels so that you end up with a 15 panel system.
There is a view that the 10 original panels were already there, they were removed to fix a roof leak and if put back as was, then we'd accept the whole thing is standard rated as the contractor is not installing an energy saving material, they are fixing the roof. So where the contractor adds panels as part of putting things back after fixing the leaks, there is an argument that the 5 additional panels could potentially be zero rated, but the rest of the works are standard rated, but then adding panels to an existing set-up is that not just a supply of goods which are added to an existing system?
What about installing a new air source heat pump and new radiators at the same time? The whole project is zero rated as the new radiators are required for the heat pump to work properly, but if you later extend the property and add a couple more radiators, those radiators are not zero rated because they are just radiators, even though they form part of an overall heating system which is energy saving.
It could be the contractor is taking a similar view with your project, they are simply adding on a few extra panels (like my example of extending the existing heat pump system by adding an extra radiator or two) and adding a few extra panels to what was already there is not "installing an energy saving system", the energy saving system is already there....and by that logic, this is may be how the contractor is talking about you needing a new inverter to qualify - not saying they are correct - its certainly not stated in the guidance - but trust my explanation shows how they possibly arrived at that conclusion.
Depends on the facts, you don't detail what the refurbishment works are but trust you can see that the question is much more nuanced than might first seem.
HMRC guidance, section 2.9.2 explains the issue https://www.gov.uk/guidance/vat-on-energy-saving-materials-and-heating-equipment-notice-7086#installations-of-energy-saving-materials and also check out 2.9.3 and 2.9.4 with .9.4 making the point that if you have a house extension which includes fitting thermostatic valves to all radiators in the house, the overarching project is the extension and the whole project is standard rated (even the radiator valves), but if after the extension has finished you then get a contractor in to install new radiator valves, that job alone can be zero rated.
HMRC may struggle to give you a definitive answer - nobody knows the precise details of your project, you could write to HMRC and detail the project, with plans and before/after and HMRC may then take a view, other than that, the guidance is the main source of decision making and it'll be between you and the contractor to negotiate....it does not sound like the contractor is trying to pull a fast one, sounds like they are trying to firm up the job as being zero rated by adding the inverter which then looks much better on paper than just adding 5 panels to an existing system (which sounds like para 2.93/2.9.4 and comes across as just extending an existing system). In the same para's HMRC talk of a scenario where the extension is done first and then the thermostatic radiator valves are added later as a new project and in that scenario the valves can be zero rated, whereas if done at same time as extension, the extension is the dominant supply.
HMRC are consulting with the industry and experts with a view to amending and updating their existing guidance (the notice I link to above) with a view to further clarification and scenarios such as installing an additional battery storage to an existing system which already has battery storage and other little quirks which have cropped up since the zero rate was extended to cover solar panels, etc.
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Just to add, if stock is held in the EU, that would normally trigger a VAT registration in the EU member state where the goods are stored (place of supply of goods is where they are at time of sale), so HMRC are right, sales not shown on the UK VAT return, but you may have a requirement to register for VAT elsewhere....presumably the EU customers are being charged EU VAT?
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Your Box 7 should reflect the value of your purchases, whether you can reclaim VAT or not.
As HMRC have posted, if you have a bank payment in your bank account or an order confirmation or credit card receipt but no VAT invoice, you still record the value (gross) in Box 7 and no VAT to reclaim in Box 4 (so you could see it as a zero rated if that is easier).
Come year end, in theory your Box 7 purchases should roughly match your expenditure as per your year end accounts/P&L and if there is a big difference then it might indicate coding errors elsewhere in your accounts, likewise, Box 6 should reflect the sales made by the business (regardless of VAT status) and so your Income in the year end accounts should roughly match your 4 VAT return quarters Box 6 (not always as your year end might be different to your VAT return quarters but point is a year end reconciliation between VAT return and your finalised accounts can help ensure accuracy and spot potential errors in your return or your accounts.
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No Because you can never reclaim foreign VAT on a UK VAT return, you can only reclaim UK VAT charged by a UK VAT registered supplier.
So you cannot reclaim EU VAT relating to hotels, transport or anything else via your UK VAT return.
You might be able to submit a 13th Directive refund claim directly to the EU member state, different member states have slightly different rules as to whether VAT can be reclaimed on hospitality/food but in theory a claim could be made.
Such a claim is nothing to do with the UK VAT return.
How to claim a refund of VAT paid in an EU member state - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
If it is a regular expense then might be worth using a third party firm to make a claim on your behalf (they will charge a commission, usually 25%-35%, no recommendation from me but this firm do have a useful table/chart that shows what each member state will allow for reclaim and what they will not allow. Link here : [Link removed by admin] If HMRC remove the link then just Google EU VAT Refunds and that should bring up several third parties who can do a claim for you. You can also make the claim yourself, you would need to visit the website of the tax office in the Country you wish to claim and find out from their website as to how to make a claim, most are done via a paper form you can download and post off with your original invoices/receipts, and all of these claims have a minimum claim limit of around €150-€200 so you can't submit a claim for €20 worth of VAT on beers/coffees. If you are based in Northern Ireland then you can make the claim using the HMRC website as it is a simpler process for NI businesses as they are still in the EU for VAT purposes and so can avail of the easier claiming process.
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Always best to use HMRC's actual guidance and if something is not specifically mentioned in the guidance, such as feeding sets, then assume it doesn't apply to whatever Notice you are reading.
Young children's clothing and footwear (VAT Notice 714) - GOV.UK
Is a bowl, a plate, a cup and cutlery the same as a bib?
The zero rating is specifically for children's clothing and bibs are deemed to be clothing as they are worn by babies almost all the time and HMRC accept plastic bibs can still be clothing as they too are worn on the body.
Do babies wear spoons, cups and forks as clothing? Not intentionally!
Sounds like a single supply made up of a mixture of VAT rates, you may need to decide what the dominant supply is, out of your 6 items only the bib is zero rated, the rest are standard rated.
If you take a Christmas hamper it consists of zero rated foods and standard rated alcohol or goods like the basket itself, maybe a chopping board or some cheese knives, so you have to apportion the VAT accordingly, you can't just say the whole hamper is zero rated because there is a single packet of biscuits in the contents.
Worth reading this link and its subsequent pages which shed light as to how HMRC thinks/approaches this topic.
VATSC11113 - Supply: Single and multiple supplies: HMRC’s approach: The general approach - HMRC internal manual - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
Also useful and informative article here which contains further links to HMRC guidance which has recently been updated https://www.accountingweb.co.uk/tax/business-tax/guidance-updated-on-apportioning-multiple-supplies