VAT & Indirect Tax Intelligence
VAT news digest
Curated from global sources. Twice-weekly digest, free.
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.
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.
Today's VAT news highlights key developments in Europe, Africa, and the Middle East, including updated regulations on VAT for food supplements and VAT group members in the EU. Additionally, changes to VAT refunds and e-invoicing systems are being implemented in various regions, such as the UAE and France. These developments have significant implications for businesses and individuals, with potential impacts on costs and compliance requirements.
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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.
FIRS has announced a phased e‑invoicing and e‑reporting mandate in Nigeria, with the second wave becoming mandatory on 1 July 2026 for taxpayers with annual revenues between N1 bn and N5 bn. The authority will also introduce Peppol-based invoicing, implement the Automated Tax Administration System (ATAS) for audits, and impose soft‑landing penalties effective 2027. The final wave for small enterprises is planned for 1 July 2027.
Egypt’s Tax Authority has drafted VAT amendments that lower the rate on medical devices to 5% from 14% and exempt manufacturing inputs for dialysis equipment and kidney filters. The changes aim to reduce costs for healthcare providers and boost domestic medical manufacturing.
The Tanzanian government announced a VAT exemption for the construction of affordable houses costing up to 50 million Tanzanian shillings. The measure aims to attract local and foreign investment and increase private sector participation in housing development. The exemption applies to any housing project within the specified cost limit.
Finland’s 2026 VAT regime includes a new reduced rate of 13.5% for foodstuffs, animal feed and certain agricultural products, effective January 2026. Finnish businesses must register for VAT when turnover exceeds €15,000, while non‑resident firms must register on any taxable sales with no threshold. EU B2C distance sellers face a €10,000 cross‑border sales threshold that triggers Finnish VAT registration or OSS use, and the reverse charge mechanism allows foreign suppliers to avoid registration if all sales are B2B reverse charge.
The BIR issued a circular on June 2, 2026, tightening VAT enforcement for overseas digital service providers in the Philippines. The circular mandates that providers collect 12% VAT on payments received before the regime’s June 2025 effective date, and requires non‑resident providers to register and file returns even for VAT‑exempt B2C supplies. It also clarifies VAT treatment for platform operators and digital advertising services.
The UK Court of Appeal on 12 June 2026 ruled that Bolt cannot use the Tour Operators Margin Scheme (TOMS) and must charge full 20% VAT on the entire fare. This reverses earlier tribunal decisions that had allowed Bolt to apply TOMS. The ruling has implications for other ride‑sharing operators such as Uber.
This FAQ explains the differences between Delivered Duty Paid (DDP) and Delivered Duty Unpaid (DDU) for cross‑border merchants, outlining who pays duties, the impact on customer experience, and the technical requirements for each option. It highlights that DDP offers cost certainty and faster customs clearance, while DDU can lead to refused deliveries and additional costs. The guide also details FlavorCloud’s guaranteed DDP service, which locks landed cost at checkout, and the prerequisites for product eligibility such as HS codes, country of origin, and weight.
The UAE has postponed the deadline for appointing an Accredited Service Provider (ASP) from July to October 2026, tightening the implementation window for mandatory e‑invoicing and e‑reporting, which will take effect in January 2027. Large taxpayers with revenues above AED 50 million face heightened operational risk if they delay ASP selection. Businesses are urged to secure an ASP early to allow for pilot testing, parallel reporting, and adequate training before the go‑live date.
A proposed permanent reduction of the UK hospitality VAT rate from 20% to 10% would cost an estimated £12‑14 bn per year, with the bulk of the benefit accruing to large chains such as McDonald’s. The analysis argues the cut is mis‑targeted, unlikely to lower prices, and would create incentives for businesses to re‑characterise activities to qualify for the lower rate. It suggests alternative measures—such as business‑rate reform or NIC relief—would better support the sector.
The Bailiwick Express reader letter argues that Guernsey’s proposed 3% GST will not deliver the projected £55m revenue, instead yielding a net income of only about £12.3m after costs. It highlights one‑off implementation costs of £40.9m, ongoing annual costs of £30.7m, and a £30m increase in the States Superannuation Fund liability, concluding that the claimed £50m funding gap is negligible.
Italy’s mandatory B2B e‑invoicing via the SDI platform has exposed high first‑pass rejection rates driven by master‑data errors, highlighting the need for a tax engine to ensure real‑time compliance. The article quantifies savings of €37 per invoice and a drop in rejection rates to about 5% when a tax engine is used. It underscores that even mature markets like Italy still face significant data quality challenges that a tax engine can address.
The Netherlands has made the Digital Dossier system mandatory for all customs declarations effective 16 May 2026. Paper‑based and email submissions are no longer accepted; businesses must ensure their systems are fully aligned and integrated with the Dutch Customs DMS. The change aims to streamline customs processing and reduce manual handling.