The UK government’s Simplified Customs Declaration Process (SCDP) offers a two‑stage electronic declaration method that reduces border controls for authorised traders. Importers must be pre‑authorised, hold an EORI number, and submit a supplementary declaration within ten calendar days of the reporting period’s end, keeping records for four years.
The supplementary declaration must be submitted before the end of the tenth calendar day following the end of the reporting period.
UK traders must provide evidence of compliance with Reg 31 of The Customs (Import Duty) (EU Exit) Regulations 2018 and hold an EORI number.
Traders must keep an archive of all declarations and supporting evidence for 4 years after the date of their submission.
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BBC · about 15 hours ago
Trinity Christian School in Reading closed after 13 years, citing the removal of VAT exemption on private school fees and rising business rates as the main reasons. The UK government introduced VAT on private school fees from 1 January 2025 at the standard 20% rate, expected to raise £1.8 billion a year by 2029/30. The school’s business rates increased to £35,000 from about £5,000, and its application for discretionary relief was denied.
RossMartin · 1 day ago
HMRC’s Brief 9 confirms that supplies of locum doctors are exempt from VAT under Item 5, Group 7, Schedule 9 of the VAT Act 1994. The guidance also explains how businesses can claim refunds for over‑declared output tax on such supplies made within the last four years, and notes that HMRC is reviewing policy and will issue updated guidance in due course.
UK Government · 1 day ago
HMRC has released guidance (GfC18) to help businesses in the oil and gas sector determine the VAT place of supply for services. The document outlines special place of supply rules, general rules, fixed establishment rules and other factors that may affect VAT treatment. It is intended to reduce the risk of errors and penalties.
LinkedIn Article by Laura Chipp · 2 days ago
The article explains how the place of supply rules for travel services differ from standard B2B and B2C rules, highlighting key exceptions such as accommodation, transport, restaurants and event admission. It details how the Tour Operators Margin Scheme (TOMS) shifts the place of supply to the supplier’s location, offering potential VAT savings for UK and non‑UK businesses. Practical examples illustrate how different scenarios can change whether UK VAT is due.
Forecourt Trader · 6 days ago
UK tribunal judge ruled that public EV charging should be taxed at the 5% domestic electricity rate rather than the 20% commercial rate, based on a de‑minimis threshold of 1,000 kWh per month. The decision, made after a challenge by Deloitte for Charge My Street, applies to B2C usage but leaves B2B charging at 20% pending further guidance. HMRC may appeal, but the ruling could reduce the ‘pavement tax’ on public charging.
FleetNews · 6 days ago
A UK tax tribunal has ruled that VAT on public EV charging should be reduced from 20% to 5%, a change that could correct the imbalance for drivers without home chargers. The ruling has not yet been adopted by HMRC, and the article discusses how shared charging infrastructure can complement tax reform to accelerate fleet electrification.