What Is the VAT Reverse Charge?

Accounting Wise - What Is the VAT Reverse Charge

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If your business buys or sells certain services from suppliers outside the UK, or operates in specific UK industries such as construction, you may have encountered the VAT reverse charge. For many business owners, the term prompts confusion. Who pays the VAT? Who accounts for it? And what happens if you get it wrong?

This guide explains how the VAT reverse charge works, which businesses and transactions it applies to, and what your obligations are under current HMRC rules.

What Is the VAT Reverse Charge?

The VAT reverse charge is a mechanism that shifts the responsibility for accounting for VAT from the supplier to the customer. Under normal VAT rules, the supplier charges VAT on a sale, collects it from the customer, and pays it over to HMRC. Under the reverse charge, the supplier does not charge VAT. Instead, the customer accounts for the VAT themselves on their own VAT return, both as output tax (as if they had charged it) and, where they have a right to reclaim, as input tax.

The result, in most cases, is a net nil VAT movement for the customer, but the transaction is still declared and recorded correctly with HMRC. The primary purpose is to prevent VAT fraud, particularly in supply chains where unscrupulous traders charge VAT and disappear before paying it to HMRC.

Where Does the Reverse Charge Apply?

There are two main contexts in which the VAT reverse charge applies to UK businesses.

1. Cross-Border Services (Business-to-Business)

When a UK VAT-registered business purchases services from a supplier based outside the UK, the reverse charge typically applies under what are known as the general place of supply rules. Common examples include consultancy, digital services, legal advice, accountancy, software licences, and marketing services purchased from overseas providers.

In these cases, the UK customer accounts for VAT at the UK rate applicable to those services, as though they were the supplier. HMRC provides detailed guidance on the place of supply rules for services.

2. The Domestic Reverse Charge for Construction Services (CIS)

Since 1 March 2021, a domestic reverse charge has applied to certain building and construction services in the UK. Known formally as the Construction Services Domestic Reverse Charge (DRC), it was introduced by HMRC to combat fraud within the construction supply chain.

Under the DRC, VAT-registered subcontractors supplying construction services to VAT-registered contractors do not charge VAT. Instead, the contractor (the customer) accounts for the VAT on their return.

The Construction Services Domestic Reverse Charge: Who It Applies To

The DRC applies when all of the following conditions are met:

  • The supply is of construction services or related goods supplied alongside those services.
  • Both the supplier and the customer are VAT-registered in the UK.
  • The customer is registered for the Construction Industry Scheme (CIS).
  • The supply is not made to an end user or intermediary supplier.
  • The services are not zero-rated.

An end user is a business or individual that uses the construction services for its own purposes rather than to make an onward supply of those services. Property developers, retailers, and housing associations that commission construction work but do not sell it on as a construction supply are typically end users, and the reverse charge does not apply to them.

What Services Are Included?

The DRC covers a wide range of construction and building activities, including:

  • Construction, alteration, repair, extension, and demolition of buildings and structures.
  • Installation of heating, lighting, air conditioning, drainage, and ventilation systems.
  • Internal cleaning of buildings and structures as part of a construction contract.
  • Painting and decorating.
  • Site preparation, including excavation and ground stabilisation.

Certain services are excluded, such as professional architectural or surveying services, drilling for oil or gas, and the installation of security systems, unless supplied alongside other qualifying construction work. Full details are available in HMRC’s VAT reverse charge technical guide.

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How the Reverse Charge Works in Practice

For the Supplier

If you are a subcontractor supplying reverse charge services, you do not add VAT to your invoice. Instead, your invoice must clearly state that the reverse charge applies and that the customer is required to account for the VAT. Your invoice should include a line such as: “Reverse charge: Customer to account for VAT to HMRC.”

You still need to show the net value of the supply on your VAT return in Box 6 (total value of sales). However, you do not include output tax in Box 1.

For the Customer

As the recipient of a reverse charge supply, you account for VAT on the full value of the supply. On your VAT return:

  • Box 1 (VAT due on sales): Include the output tax as if you had charged it.
  • Box 4 (VAT reclaimed on purchases): Reclaim the same amount as input tax, subject to your normal recovery position.
  • Box 6 (total sales): Include the net value of the supply.
  • Box 7 (total purchases): Include the net value of the purchase.

For most fully VAT-registered businesses with full input tax recovery, this results in a net nil VAT cost. However, the transaction must still be declared correctly.

A Practical Example

A subcontractor invoices a main contractor for £10,000 of plastering work. Both are VAT-registered, and the main contractor is CIS-registered. The subcontractor issues an invoice for £10,000 net, noting that the reverse charge applies. The main contractor records £2,000 output VAT (at 20%) in Box 1 and £2,000 input VAT in Box 4. The subcontractor records £10,000 in Box 6 only.

The Reverse Charge and Overseas Purchases: A Summary

For businesses purchasing services from overseas suppliers, the reverse charge applies more broadly and covers most business-to-business services where the customer is in the UK. This includes digital services, professional services, and intellectual property rights, among others.

Where the overseas supplier is not VAT-registered in the UK, the UK customer must self-account for VAT at the appropriate UK rate. The same Box 1 and Box 4 entries apply, and the same net nil outcome typically results for fully taxable businesses.

Businesses with partial exemption must take particular care, as reverse charge VAT on purchases may not be fully recoverable, creating a real VAT cost.

Cash Flow Implications

One of the more significant practical effects of the domestic reverse charge in construction is its impact on cash flow for subcontractors. Previously, subcontractors collected VAT from contractors and held it until their VAT return was due, effectively using it as short-term working capital. The reverse charge removes this entirely.

If your business has been affected, it is worth reviewing your payment terms, credit facilities, and VAT return frequency. Businesses whose VAT returns result in regular repayments from HMRC may benefit from switching to monthly VAT returns. You can apply to do so through your HMRC online account.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Charging VAT when the reverse charge applies. This creates an overclaimed position for the customer and a liability for the supplier.
  • Not charging VAT when the reverse charge does not apply. If the customer is an end user, normal VAT rules apply. Failing to charge VAT in error can create a VAT debt for the supplier.
  • Incorrect VAT return entries. Missing Box 1 or Box 4 entries can distort your VAT position and trigger HMRC queries.
  • Failing to verify the customer’s VAT and CIS status. Before applying the reverse charge, you should confirm that the customer is both VAT-registered and CIS-registered. Keep records of this verification.
  • Not updating invoicing templates. Your accounting software must be configured to produce compliant reverse charge invoices. Most major platforms, including Xero, QuickBooks, and Sage, support this.

Penalties for Non-Compliance

HMRC can assess penalties for errors in the application of the reverse charge. If a supplier incorrectly charges VAT on a reverse charge supply, HMRC may disallow the customer’s input tax recovery and charge the supplier for the output tax. Penalties of up to 100% of the unpaid tax can apply in cases of deliberate non-compliance, though HMRC has indicated a proportionate approach for genuine errors made in good faith.

Keeping clear records of why the reverse charge was or was not applied to each transaction will be your first line of defence in the event of an HMRC enquiry.

The compliance stakes increased further from April 2026, following powers introduced in the Autumn Budget 2025. HMRC can now cancel a business’s Gross Payment Status and impose penalties on directors where they are linked to fraudulent supply chains. At the same time, HMRC has moved away from the light-touch approach it took in the years following the DRC’s introduction in 2021. The tax authority is now conducting active enquiries, raising assessments, and issuing compliance notices where reverse charge accounting, CIS classification, or invoicing are found to be incorrect. For construction businesses in particular, VAT process risk should now be treated as a serious compliance priority, not an administrative afterthought.

Conclusion on VAT Reverse Charges

The VAT reverse charge exists to protect the tax base and reduce fraud, but for businesses caught within its scope, it requires careful attention to invoicing, VAT return preparation, and record-keeping. Whether you are a construction subcontractor, a contractor receiving services, or a business purchasing professional services from overseas suppliers, understanding your obligations under the reverse charge is essential to staying compliant with HMRC.

If you are unsure whether the reverse charge applies to a specific transaction, or if your invoicing and accounting processes need reviewing, speaking with a qualified accountant is the most reliable way to avoid costly errors. The rules are detailed and the consequences of getting them wrong can be significant.

For tailored advice on VAT compliance and how the reverse charge affects your business, request a callback with Accounting Wise.

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VAT Reverse Charges FAQ

No. The domestic reverse charge for construction services only applies where both the supplier and the customer are VAT-registered. If either party is not VAT-registered, normal VAT rules apply, or the supply may be outside the scope of VAT altogether.

The DRC applies to goods supplied alongside qualifying construction services as part of the same supply. However, if a supplier sells materials separately, without any element of construction services, the reverse charge does not apply to those materials.

You should ask the customer to confirm their end user status in writing and keep a record. If a customer provides false information to avoid the reverse charge, the liability shifts to them. You will be protected provided you took reasonable steps to verify.

Import VAT is handled separately through the postponed VAT accounting (PVA) system for goods imported into the UK. PVA is distinct from the reverse charge, though it operates on a similar principle of self-accounting. HMRC guidance on postponed VAT accounting covers this in detail.

This depends on your VAT recovery position. If your business makes only taxable supplies and you are fully VAT-registered, you will generally reclaim all the VAT you account for. If you are partially exempt, your recovery will be limited, creating an actual VAT cost on reverse charge purchases.

Glossary of Key VAT Reverse Charge Terms

VAT (Value Added Tax) – A consumption tax charged on most goods and services in the UK. The standard rate is 20%. VAT-registered businesses collect it on behalf of HMRC and can reclaim VAT they have paid on purchases.
Reverse Charge – A VAT accounting mechanism that shifts responsibility for declaring and paying VAT from the supplier to the customer. The customer accounts for both the output tax and, where applicable, the input tax on their own VAT return.
Output Tax – VAT you owe to HMRC on your sales or, under the reverse charge, on purchases you are required to self-account for.
Input Tax – VAT you can reclaim from HMRC on goods and services purchased for business use.
Domestic Reverse Charge (DRC) – The specific reverse charge rules that apply to building and construction services in the UK, introduced on 1 March 2021 to combat missing trader fraud in the construction supply chain.
Construction Industry Scheme (CIS) – An HMRC scheme under which contractors deduct money from subcontractor payments and pass it to HMRC as advance payment towards the subcontractor's tax and National Insurance. CIS registration is a condition for the DRC to apply.
End User – A business or individual that receives construction services for its own use and does not make an onward supply of those services. End users are exempt from the DRC, and the supplier charges VAT in the normal way.
Intermediary Supplier – A VAT and CIS-registered business that is connected to the end user and sits between the end user and a subcontractor. Normal VAT rules apply to supplies made to an intermediary supplier where they have notified the subcontractor of their status in writing.
Gross Payment Status (GPS) – A CIS status allowing subcontractors to be paid in full without tax deductions. From April 2026, HMRC has the power to cancel GPS where a business is linked to fraudulent supply chains.
Missing Trader Fraud – A form of VAT fraud where a business charges VAT on its sales but deliberately fails to pay it over to HMRC before dissolving. The DRC was introduced specifically to prevent this in construction.
Postponed VAT Accounting (PVA) – A separate self-accounting mechanism for import VAT on goods brought into the UK, allowing businesses to declare and reclaim import VAT on the same VAT return rather than paying it at the border.
Partial Exemption – A VAT position where a business makes both taxable and VAT-exempt supplies, meaning it cannot reclaim all of its input tax. Partially exempt businesses face a real VAT cost on reverse charge purchases.
Place of Supply – The rules that determine which country has the right to tax a transaction. For most B2B services, the place of supply is the customer's country, which is why UK businesses must apply the reverse charge when buying services from overseas suppliers.
VAT Notice 735 – The HMRC notice that sets out the domestic reverse charge procedure for specified goods and services, including building and construction services.
HMRC – His Majesty's Revenue and Customs, the UK government body responsible for collecting taxes and administering VAT.
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