by digitalWestie on 11/25/14, 10:01 AM with 24 comments
by bojanz on 11/25/14, 1:20 PM
This also changes expectations from ecommerce software. It is not feasible to expect the administrator to research & create 75 VAT rates, then update them as they change (sometimes yearly). Plus, the actual logic of determining which rate to apply.
We've been redesigning our ecommerce package (Drupal Commerce) to account for this. We've extracted our solution into a PHP library that anyone can use: https://github.com/commerceguys/tax It's been verified and approved by our VAT experts. Even if you're not using PHP, clone our approach and make your users happy :)
I've also gone through these problems from a developer perspective, in case anyone is interested: https://drupalcommerce.org/blog/31036/commerce-2x-stories-ta...
by mike_hearn on 11/25/14, 11:26 AM
- People are now incentivised to game the system by trying to seem like they are coming from low VAT jurisdictions, so they get lower prices. It's the business that is liable if customers get away with this.
- The "two pieces of evidence" rule means IP address and ... ? Realistically, it seems the only other thing that'd work is credit card billing address, do people even have any other way to prove their location over the internet? Wire transfer details? So for anything that isn't very expensive, forget about selling with anything OTHER than a credit card. Great, businesses selling digital goods just got nailed onto the cross of a 1970s era payment technology that barely evolves at all; how backwards. Not to mention that many people in the EU don't even have credit cards and make payments in other ways, which may or may not give geographic info.
- More rules that are so absurd they can't be reliably enforced, like the travelling rule, so they are just setting traps for the politically unfavoured.
All this to try and undo the effects of the single market the EU worked so hard to create, by preventing countries competing with each other on tax rates? Should have thought of that beforehand!
by artumi-richard on 11/25/14, 10:56 AM
Also, you can do like Digital Ocean, have premises in the EU, and customers in the EU, but claim to be only an American company and ignore the VAT question completely. Still, I'm not sure how long they will get away with that.
by lucaspiller on 11/25/14, 10:59 AM
The main issue with this legislation is that it isn't clear, and what has been said is contradictory. As an example, this is from the EC guidance notes [0]:
> Where telecommunications, broadcasting or electronic services are supplied to a private individual, VAT, as a rule, will be due at the place where the private individual has his permanent address or usually resides (as from 2015).
This completely contradicts what HMRC said as mentioned in the article :D I haven't heard any complaints from other countries, so is it just HMRC in the UK who are messing this up?
[0] http://ec.europa.eu/taxation_customs/resources/documents/tax...
by simonbarker87 on 11/25/14, 10:54 AM
by Spearchucker on 11/25/14, 11:08 AM
--
SECOND NOTICE – European Union VAT Changes Coming 1/1/2015
Tax laws in the European Union (EU), which govern the Value Added Tax (VAT) rate applied to business-to-consumer digital goods, are changing on 1/1/2015. This affects the VAT rate on content offered in the Windows and Windows Phone Stores. You may want to start thinking about how this change could impact your EU pricing decisions.
Beginning on 1/1/2015, the applicable VAT rate for paid business-to-consumer transactions for digital goods will change from 15% to the country-specific VAT rate.
All EU countries are Microsoft tax remit, which means the price you select in Dev Center for your app and/or in-app purchase is the final sale price to the customer and already includes applicable taxes. Microsoft then subtracts the taxes from the price prior to payout, and remits them on your behalf.
--
They then give the VAT rates for each affected EU country. Most go up to just above or below 20% VAT. Hungary goes as high as 27%, and Luxembourg, the lowest, goes up by 2% to 17%.
by jdimov on 11/25/14, 11:01 AM
This is simply not true. In fact, the exact opposite is true. A UK VAT-registered business must NOT charge VAT when selling to customers within the EU.
Which leads me to believe that the author doesn't know what he's talking about.
by pdknsk on 11/25/14, 11:59 AM
https://support.google.com/cloudbilling/answer/6090602?hl=en
by chrisdew on 11/25/14, 1:04 PM
The new rules are very bad for non-VAT registered UK companies which create and sell digital goods. If my company continues selling (http://www.virtsync.com) to EU countries, it would have to register for VAT in each EU country.
For £2k in sales, I would have to do VAT returns for 27 countries, in several foreign languages! It is clearly not worth it.
(VAT-registered companies can use HMRC's MOSS: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/vat-supplying-dig...)
by VBprogrammer on 11/25/14, 10:53 AM
by givan on 11/25/14, 11:07 AM