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The UK government has introduced a temporary VAT cut from 20% to 5% on a range of family-friendly activities, including cinema, theatre, attractions and children’s meals, running from 25 June 2026 until 1 September 2026. Businesses may choose to pass on the reduced rate, and the scheme also offers free local bus travel for children in England during August.
Today's VAT news highlights key developments in global tax compliance, including updates on e-invoicing systems in the UAE and France, as well as sales tax filing and amnesty initiatives in the Americas. Additionally, we explore VAT registration thresholds in Europe, providing insight into the complex and evolving tax landscape. These articles offer essential guidance for businesses navigating international tax regulations and seeking to mitigate compliance risks.
Today's VAT news highlights key developments in European tax regulations, including Germany's shift to an opt-in VAT grouping system and the EU's imposition of an e-commerce customs duty fee. Additionally, we explore the French e-invoicing mandate and its implications for businesses. Meanwhile, African countries such as Nigeria are also implementing tax reforms, including automated tax administration systems and proposed VAT amendments to support healthcare services.
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The Court of Appeal ruled that public funds paid to further education institutions are third‑party consideration for the supply of education, placing them within the scope of VAT but exempt. HMRC accepts the judgment, will not pursue a further appeal, and maintains the current position pending consultation, meaning institutions can continue their existing VAT treatment until any future policy change applies prospectively.
The Thomson Reuters Institute report highlights that EU‑wide ViDA mandates for cross‑border e‑invoicing and digital reporting will come into force in 2030, while many member states are already implementing national e‑invoice and real‑time reporting requirements. Despite widespread awareness, only 22% of EU tax and finance professionals have a formal, funded transition program, underscoring a significant readiness gap.
This guide explains how to file Mississippi sales tax returns online via the Department of Revenue's TAP website, outlines filing deadlines, penalties, and the state's tax rate structure, and notes that SaaS products became taxable as of July 1, 2023.
UAE e‑invoicing will give the Federal Tax Authority real‑time, invoice‑level visibility via the Peppol network, enabling automated matching of output and input VAT. The new system requires businesses to align VAT return timing with invoice transmission, ensure credit notes reference original invoices, and depend on suppliers’ successful transmission for input VAT recovery. Firms should update supplier agreements and reconcile monthly to avoid audit triggers.
A proposal from the Streamlined Sales Tax Governing Board would allow unregistered remote sellers to limit their look‑back period to 24 months, subject to state law. Companies would apply through the board, with state authorities verifying eligibility, and the program is intended to avoid overlap with existing voluntary disclosure agreements. The initiative aims to encourage remote sellers to come into compliance following the Wayfair decision.
The article lists the 2026 VAT registration exemption thresholds for 32 European countries, highlighting recent changes such as Hungary’s increase to 20 million HUF, Poland’s rise to 240,000 PLN, and Romania’s jump to 395,000 RON. It also notes Belgium’s pending 30 000 € threshold and Switzerland’s highest absolute threshold of CHF 100,000.
France’s e‑invoicing reform mandates all VAT‑subject businesses to use an approved platform from 1 September 2026, with SMEs joining in 2027. The article explains the difference between accreditation and live invoice exchange, outlines penalties, and highlights the possibility of a 1 December 2026 deferral.
The UK government has announced a temporary reduction in VAT on children’s meals from 20% to 5% for the period 25 June to 1 September 2026, as part of the Great British summer savings scheme. Pubs and restaurants are already devising menus to take advantage of the discount, while industry leaders criticize the measure as a token gesture. The scheme also applies to cinema and theatre tickets and family attractions, with an estimated cost to the Treasury of £10.5 bn to £13 bn.
The UAE's Cabinet Resolution 106 imposes escalating penalties for e‑invoicing non‑compliance, with specific deadlines for appointing an accredited service provider and implementing the system. Phase 1 businesses (annual revenue ≥AED 50 million) must appoint an ASP by 30 Oct 2026 and have the system live by 1 Jan 2027, while Phase 2 businesses face similar obligations by 1 Jul 2027. Penalties include AED 5 000 per month for missed appointments, AED 5 000 per month for delayed implementation, AED 100 per invoice outside the system (capped at AED 5 000/month), and AED 1 000 per day for unreported system failures.
UAE Ministry of Finance has extended the deadline for appointing an Accredited Service Provider (ASP) to 30 October 2026 for businesses with annual revenues of AED 50 million or more. The mandatory implementation of the UAE e‑invoicing system remains 1 January 2027 for that revenue bracket, while lower‑revenue businesses and government entities have separate deadlines. Businesses must prepare ERP readiness, XML invoice compliance, and VAT configuration ahead of the implementation dates.
The UK will apply a temporary 5% VAT rate to children’s meals and family‑friendly entertainment from 25 June to 1 September 2026. The guidance clarifies eligibility, exclusions such as sports events, and that businesses are not obliged to pass the cut on to consumers.
Sweden has submitted a ViDA VAT amendment bill to Parliament, which will enter into force on 1 January 2027. The bill updates cross‑border VAT rules, reporting deadlines, expands special regime scopes, introduces new output‑VAT accounting rules for electronic interfaces, and revises input‑VAT deduction limits for certain non‑EU taxpayers.
Illinois Department of Revenue has launched a Remote Retailer Tax Amnesty Program for 2026, allowing remote retailers without physical presence to settle unpaid sales tax without penalties or interest. The program runs from August 1 to October 31, 2026, and offers simplified tax rates of 9% for general merchandise and 1.75% for qualifying items, provided retailers meet specific gross‑receipt thresholds.