Business Orientation and VAT Class For Students
Business Orientation and VAT Class For Students
Business Orientation and VAT Class For Students
Tax responsibilities
¨ send a Self Assessment tax return every year
You must also register for VAT if you expect your takings to be more than
£83,000 a year.
Limited Company
¨ A limited company is an organisation that you can set up to run your business - it’s responsible
in its own right for everything it does and its finances are separate to your personal
finances.
¨ Any profit it makes is owned by the company, after it pays Corporation Tax. The company can
then share its profits.
Ownership
¨ Every limited company has ‘members’ - the people or organisations who own shares in the
company.
¨ Directors are responsible for running the company. Directors often own shares, but they don’t
have to.
Tax responsibilities
Every financial year, the company must:
¨ put together statutory accounts
¨ send Companies House an annual return
¨ send HMRC a Company Tax Return
The company must register for VAT if you expect its takings to be more than £83,000 a year.
Partnership
A partnership is an agreement between two ore more people. There
are three types of partnership, and the responsibilities differ as follow:
1. General partnership : equal shares in profits and liabilities for the
company, also equal responsibilities for the companies solvency and
unlimited liability making this type of partnership a high risk for
individual partners.
2. Limited liability partnership: offers more protection for partners
personal assets by limiting their liabilities to that of their interest in the
company only. All partners are allowed to manage the business like in the
general partnership however a formal agreement is required.
3. Limited partnership: differs from the LLP by requiring at least one
general partner to manage and take on all risk, while passive limited
partners enjoy liability up to their investment level. General’ partners can
be personally liable for all the partnerships’ debts, while limited partners
are only liable up to the amount hey invest in the business
Tax for partnerships
• VAT return
• Prepare financial statements
• Management accounting
• Corporation tax return
• Annual return
• Payroll
Responsibilities of In-house and outsourced
Bookkeeping
PROS
§ Your accounting needs may be very specific, specialized or unusual and
outsourcing could cost you more than hiring your own accountant
§ The outsourced services usually come with a package that may not always fits your
own needs
§ Multi – tasking is a must in growing companies and with external workers will either
not be keen on offering this or wont have the time or skills to meet your need.
§ Having your own accountant brings an other forgotten value to your business,
loyalty.
§ External accountants might follow a process that would not entirely fit your needs
PROS & CONS
CONS
§ There might be some points of the year when is quieter than others so the
accountant would be less busier resulting in high cost but low benefit for the
company
§ It can be hard to recognize the perfect candidate to hire but choosing a well known
accounting setting with high reputation might be easier nowadays .
§ Setting up your own rules could be time consuming and if your accountant is fresh
out of studies you might have to face constant revisions in the firs years and
without an expertise chances are that revisions will not only be improvements.
§ Hiring someone will mean that you will have to bear the bill for a complete
package – salary, benefits, office space, accounting software, etc. When outsourcing
you pay a monthly fee that frees you from all these cost
Value Added Tax
¨ What is VAT
¨ VAT registration
¨ Businesses and charging VAT
¨ VAT rates on different goods and services
¨ VAT record keeping
¨ VAT Schemes
¤ Annual accounting Scheme
¤ VAT Cash Accounting Scheme
¤ VAT Flat Rate Scheme
¤ VAT Margin Schemes
¤ VAT Retail Schemes
¨ 6 VAT Returns
What is VAT?
§ Is a tax on consumption in other words a sales tax
levied in the UK by the national government
§ Is the third largest source of government revenue after
income tax and NI contribution
§ Is administered and collected by HMRC
§ Is levied on most goods and services provided by
registered businesses in UK
§ Is an indirect tax because the tax is paid to the
government by the seller rather than the consumer who
ultimately bears the economic burden of the tax
General principles
¨ When a business sells goods or services VAT is
added to the selling price.
VAT
Zero rated
Standard
Taxable
Rated
Reduced
Turnover Exempt
Rated
Outside the
scope of vat
Responsibilities
¨ VAT-registered businesses: must charge VAT on their goods or
services
¨ may reclaim any VAT they’ve paid on business-related goods or
services
¨ If you’re a VAT-registered business you must report to HM Revenue
and Customs (HMRC) the amount of VAT you’ve charged and the
amount of VAT you’ve paid. This is done through your VAT Return
which is usually due every 3 months.
¨ You must account for VAT on the full value of what you sell, even if
you: haven’t charged any VAT to the customer - whatever price you
charge is treated as including VAT If you’ve charged more VAT than
you’ve paid, you have to pay the difference to HMRC. If you’ve paid
more VAT than you’ve charged, you can reclaim the difference from
HMRC.
VAT Rates
¨ There are 3 different rates of VAT and you must make sure you charge the right
amount. Get a list of reduced or zero-rated goods and services.
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/rates-of-vat-on-different-goods-and-services
¨ Standard rate: Most goods and services are standard rate. You should charge this
rate unless the goods or services are classed as reduced or zero-rated.
¨ Reduced rate: When to charge this rate can depend on the item being provided but
also the circumstance of the sale. For example: children’s car seats and domestic fuel
or power are always charged at 5% mobility aids for older people are only
charged at 5% if they’re for someone over 60 and the goods are installed in their
home
¨ Zero rate: Zero-rated means that the goods are still VAT-taxable, but the rate of
VAT you must charge your customers is 0%. Examples of zero-rated goods include:
books and newspapers children’s clothes and shoes motorcycle helmets You still have
to record zero-rated transactions in your VAT accounts and report them on your VAT
Return. Rates can change and you must apply any changes to the rates from the
date they change.
EXAMPLES
§ Standard rated : Bottled water, Clothes and footwear
for adults, confectionary, electrical goods
§ Reduced rated : Children’s car seat, electricity, gas,
heating, sanitary products, mobility aids for elderly
§ Zero rated : books, maps, helmets, leaflets, children’s
clothes, raw food, public transport
§ Exempt : Antiques, art, commercial land & buildings,
education, financial services, postage stamps or services
§ Outside the scope of VAT : statutory fees and services,
toll charges( bridges, tunnels and roads operated by
public authorities), voluntary donations for charities
3. What you must do when charging
VAT
¨ You need to know the right VAT rate so you can charge
it correctly and reclaim it on your purchases.
¨ If a transaction is a standard, reduced or zero-rated
taxable supply, you must: charge the right rate of VAT
work out the VAT if a single price is shown that includes
or excludes VAT show the VAT information on your
invoice show the transaction in your VAT account –
¨ a summary of your VAT show the amount on your VAT
Return You may be able to reclaim the VAT on
purchases that relate to these sales.
¨ You can’t claim back all of the amount you’ve paid if
you pay the wrong amount of VAT on a purchase.
4. VAT-Inclusive & Exclusive Prices
¨ You’ll need to make a calculation when charging VAT on
goods or services, or when working out the amount of VAT
you can claim back on items which were sold inclusive of
VAT.
¨ VAT-inclusive prices To work out a price including the
standard rate of VAT (20%), multiply the price excluding
VAT by 1.2. To work out a price including the reduced rate
of VAT (5%), multiply the price excluding VAT by 1.05.
¨ VAT-exclusive prices To work out a price excluding the
standard rate of VAT (20%) divide the price including VAT
by 1.2. To work out a price excluding the reduced rate of
VAT (5%) divide the price including VAT by 1.05.
5. When not to charge VAT
¨ You can’t charge VAT on ‘out of scope’ items.
¨ Out of scope Some goods and services are outside
Unique invoice number that follows on from the last invoice Yes Yes Yes
Your business name and address Yes Yes Yes
Your VAT number Yes Yes Yes
Date Yes No Yes
The tax point (or ‘time of supply’) if this is different from the invoice
date Yes Yes Yes
refund
§ If regularly reclaim VAT, will only get one
¨ antiques
¨ a copy of the invoice you gave to the buyer when you sold the item
You must keep the usual VAT records when you use a margin scheme.
You must also keep:
¨ a stock book that tracks each item sold under the margin scheme
individually
¨ copies of purchase and sales invoices for all items
¨ You must keep VAT records for 6 years. You have to keep records until you
sell the item for any stock you bought more than 6 years ago that you plan
to sell under the margin scheme.
Marginal VAT Return
You must show any goods you bought or sold using a margin scheme on
your VAT return.
Box on the VAT What to fill in
Return form
Box 1 Include the output tax due on all eligible goods
sold in the period covered by the return
Box 6 Include the full selling price of all eligible
goods sold in the period, less any VAT due
on the margin
Box 7 Include the full purchase price of eligible goods
bought in the period
VAT retail schemes
¨ Retail industry-Retail is the sale of goods to end
users, not for resale but for use and consumption by
the purchaser. The retail transaction is at the end of
supply chain.
Supply chain :