VAT return accountant London
VAT returns, VAT registration and VAT compliance support for UK businesses.
Tax Accountant London prepares VAT returns, reviews VAT records, supports MTD VAT filing, VAT registration, VAT scheme reviews, VAT corrections, domestic reverse charge checks and HMRC VAT compliance matters for businesses, landlords, contractors, consultants, retailers, service providers and companies.
A proper VAT return depends on taxable supplies, exempt supplies, input tax evidence, VAT invoices, digital records, VAT schemes, reverse charge rules, partial exemption, overseas supplies, property transactions and whether previous VAT periods need correction.
Output VAT, input VAT, adjustments, VAT schemes and filing position reviewed before submission.
Digital records, compatible software, VAT account and return figures checked for consistency.
VAT errors, penalties, assessments, inspections, compliance checks and HMRC correspondence handled carefully.
VAT returns for small businesses and companies
A VAT return should reconcile sales VAT, purchase VAT, adjustments and digital records.
VAT-registered businesses normally submit VAT returns to HMRC showing VAT due on sales, VAT recoverable on purchases, adjustments and the net amount payable or repayable. The figures should be supported by VAT invoices, bookkeeping records, bank records and a digital VAT account.
A VAT return accountant should check more than the boxes on the return. The work should consider whether the business is correctly registered, whether the right VAT rate has been used, whether input tax is supported, whether a VAT scheme applies, whether reverse charge or partial exemption rules matter and whether earlier VAT errors need correction.
Who needs VAT compliance support
VAT support for small businesses, limited companies, landlords, contractors and businesses contacted by HMRC.
VAT becomes more technical when a business has mixed supplies, property income, overseas sales, reverse charge transactions, exempt income, poor records, late returns or HMRC questions.
Small businesses and companies
Quarterly VAT returns, MTD VAT filing, VAT account review, VAT payment summaries and VAT record checks.
Businesses approaching the VAT threshold
Taxable turnover review, registration timing, late registration risk, pricing impact and first VAT return support.
Property and construction businesses
Domestic reverse charge, CIS interaction, property VAT, opted property, exempt rent and input tax review.
Businesses contacted by HMRC
VAT compliance checks, VAT assessments, penalties, repayment checks, error corrections and HMRC VAT enquiries.
VAT accounting services
Choose the VAT route by registration status, supply type, records and HMRC risk.
VAT support should be scoped around the actual VAT issue. A normal quarterly VAT return is different from late registration, partial exemption, property VAT, reverse charge, overseas services, repayment checks or HMRC VAT compliance work.
VAT registration accountant London
VAT registration should be checked before the threshold is crossed, not after HMRC asks questions.
VAT registration depends on taxable turnover, expected taxable supplies, business establishment, supply type and timing. A business can be late registering where it fails to monitor rolling taxable turnover properly.
We review taxable sales, exempt income, zero-rated supplies and whether the VAT registration threshold is being approached or exceeded.
VAT registration may be needed where future taxable turnover is expected to exceed the threshold within the relevant period.
Where registration should have happened earlier, VAT due, penalties, interest and first return treatment should be reviewed.
Some businesses register voluntarily to recover input VAT or improve commercial presentation, but pricing and admin should be considered.
Overseas businesses making taxable supplies in the UK may need specialist VAT registration review.
Deregistration may be available where taxable turnover falls below the deregistration threshold, but stock and asset VAT points can arise.
MTD VAT return filing
VAT returns should be supported by digital records and a clear VAT audit trail.
Making Tax Digital for VAT means VAT-registered businesses should keep digital VAT records and submit VAT returns through compatible software unless exempt. The VAT return should link back to the business records and VAT account.
Sales VAT should be reviewed by VAT rate, supply type, invoice date, tax point and whether the supply is taxable, exempt or outside scope.
Purchase VAT should be supported by valid VAT invoices and checked for business use, blocked input tax and mixed-use restrictions.
The VAT account should explain how the VAT return boxes are produced from sales, purchases, adjustments and digital records.
VAT returns should be submitted using compatible software, with digital records maintained consistently for the VAT period.
VAT return boxes and records
The VAT return boxes should make sense against the business activity and records.
VAT return errors often occur because businesses rely on bookkeeping software without reviewing VAT codes, invoice evidence, reverse charge entries, exempt income or unusual transactions.
VAT due on sales, reverse charge output tax and adjustments should be reviewed against sales records and VAT codes.
VAT reclaimed on purchases should be supported by valid VAT invoices and business-use evidence.
Net sales and purchase values should be checked for coding errors, exempt supplies, outside-scope items and reverse charge treatment.
The VAT control account should reconcile to submitted returns, payments, repayments and any prior-period adjustments.
VAT return figures should be sense-checked against bank receipts, invoices, credit notes and bookkeeping ledgers.
Prior-period VAT errors may need correction in the next VAT return or separate notification depending on the size and nature of the error.
Specialist VAT return issues
Areas often missed in standard VAT return processing.
Many VAT mistakes happen because the transaction is not standard-rated UK sales and purchases. A proper VAT review should consider supply type, evidence, customer location, property use and whether input tax recovery is restricted.
Construction businesses may need reverse charge VAT treatment where supplies fall within the relevant construction rules.
Businesses with taxable and exempt income may need partial exemption calculations before input VAT is reclaimed.
Commercial property, opted property, exempt rents, service charges, conversions and property transactions need careful VAT review.
Place of supply, reverse charge services, overseas customers and overseas suppliers can affect VAT return entries.
Flat Rate Scheme, Cash Accounting Scheme and Annual Accounting Scheme can change how VAT returns are calculated and paid.
Business entertainment, cars, mixed-use costs and unsupported invoices can restrict input VAT recovery.
VAT scheme review
The right VAT scheme can affect cashflow, records and the VAT amount payable.
VAT schemes should not be selected without checking the business model, customer type, input VAT level, turnover, pricing and admin. A scheme that helps one business may be unsuitable for another.
VAT is generally based on invoice tax points, with input tax recovered where evidence and rules allow.
VAT may be accounted for based on cash received and paid, helping some businesses with cashflow.
A simplified scheme that may reduce admin, but limited cost trader rules and input VAT restrictions can make it unsuitable.
Can reduce filing frequency but requires planned payments and may not suit businesses needing close VAT cashflow control.
VAT errors and corrections
VAT mistakes should be corrected through the right route before they become larger HMRC problems.
VAT errors can arise from missed sales, incorrect VAT codes, overclaimed input tax, late registration, reverse charge mistakes, exempt income, bad debt relief errors or unsupported purchase invoices.
Sales may have been treated as exempt, zero-rated or outside scope when VAT should have been charged.
VAT may have been reclaimed without a valid VAT invoice or on costs where input tax is restricted.
The business may need to calculate VAT due from the correct registration date and consider penalty exposure.
Incorrect reverse charge treatment can affect both output VAT and input VAT entries on the return.
Bad debt relief needs conditions and timing reviewed before being claimed on a VAT return.
Some VAT errors can be adjusted on a return, while larger or deliberate errors may need separate notification.
HMRC VAT compliance checks and penalties
HMRC VAT enquiries should be reviewed before records are sent.
HMRC may ask about VAT returns, repayment claims, input tax evidence, sales records, VAT registration dates, VAT schemes, exempt income, reverse charge treatment, property VAT or earlier VAT periods. The response should be based on records and a clear VAT position.
Records needed for VAT returns
VAT records should support every figure submitted to HMRC.
Sales invoices, credit notes, till reports, e-commerce reports, VAT rates, tax points and customer location where relevant.
Supplier invoices, import VAT evidence, expense receipts, credit notes, business-use evidence and VAT coding.
MTD-compatible software records, VAT account, VAT control account, return workings and digital links where required.
VAT certificate, VAT returns, payment history, VAT scheme details, HMRC letters, penalties and prior VAT adjustments.
VAT return process
A structured route from VAT records to filing, payment and compliance review.
We identify the VAT period, registration status, VAT scheme, business activity, records and deadline.
We review sales, purchases, VAT invoices, software records, adjustments and any unusual transactions.
We prepare VAT return figures, review output VAT, input VAT, adjustments, payment position and MTD submission.
We file the agreed VAT return or advise on correction, disclosure, registration, scheme change or HMRC response.
VAT return fees
VAT fees depend on records, transaction volume, scheme and VAT risk.
We quote before work starts. A simple quarterly VAT return with clean bookkeeping is different from late VAT registration, partial exemption, reverse charge errors, VAT repayment checks, property VAT or HMRC compliance support.
For a standard VAT return with clean digital records and no specialist VAT issues.
For VAT registration support, software setup review and first VAT return preparation.
For partial exemption, property VAT, reverse charge, error correction, penalties or HMRC VAT checks.
VAT Returns FAQs
Common questions about VAT registration, VAT returns, MTD, input tax, schemes, corrections and HMRC penalties.
When does a business need to register for VAT?
A business must normally register for VAT if its taxable turnover exceeds the VAT registration threshold or if it expects taxable turnover to exceed the threshold within the relevant period. Some overseas businesses may have different registration rules.
What is a VAT return?
A VAT return reports VAT due on sales, VAT recoverable on purchases, adjustments and the net amount payable to or repayable by HMRC for the VAT period.
What is Making Tax Digital for VAT?
Making Tax Digital for VAT requires VAT-registered businesses to keep digital VAT records and submit VAT returns using compatible software unless they are exempt.
Can I reclaim VAT on all business expenses?
No. Input VAT recovery depends on valid VAT invoices, business use, VAT registration status, supply type and whether any restrictions apply, such as blocked input tax or partial exemption.
What records are needed for a VAT return?
VAT records usually include sales invoices, purchase invoices, credit notes, import VAT evidence, VAT account, VAT return workings, digital records and HMRC correspondence.
What is the domestic reverse charge?
The domestic reverse charge changes how VAT is accounted for on certain construction services. The customer accounts for VAT instead of the supplier charging VAT, where the rules apply.
What is partial exemption?
Partial exemption can apply where a business makes both taxable and exempt supplies. It can restrict how much input VAT can be recovered.
What happens if a VAT return is late?
Late VAT returns can lead to penalty points and, once the penalty threshold is met, financial penalties. Late VAT payments can also create penalties and interest.
What if I made a mistake on a VAT return?
VAT errors should be reviewed to decide whether they can be corrected on a later VAT return or need separate notification to HMRC. The route depends on the amount and nature of the error.
Should I reply to an HMRC VAT letter myself?
You should review the HMRC letter, deadline, records requested and possible exposure before replying. VAT responses should be based on evidence, VAT rules and a clear explanation of the business position.