Most of us are used to routine VAT inspections. But if it is your first inspection, whether as a sole trader or FD of a large group, an impending VAT inspection can be somewhat daunting. Even experienced accountants can be wary if they are concerned about the business’s compliance history or if the accounting records aren’t as good as they should be.
Here are some simple guidelines for dealing with inspections, whatever your situation.
How, when and why?
Very large businesses have allocated VAT officers who visit their traders several times a year, perhaps for several days or even weeks at a time. But most visits are allocated based on a number of criteria, including the size of the business and the complexity of the business.
The primary purpose of routine visits is to ensure that the business is accounting for the right amount of VAT at the right time. It doesn’t mean that they will verify every single transaction but they will be ensuring that the accounting system is sufficiently robust to ensure that the VAT returns are correct and can be supported by the accounting records
The other reason that an officer visits is that there is a query of some kind, most commonly when the business has submitted a repayment claim and HMRC needs to verify that the claim is correct.
A few practical points about the visit itself
And on the technical side
Compliance issues
In the past, many businesses and even some accountants turned a blind eye to repeated compliance errors, especially those that didn’t affect the actual VAT liability of the business or cost anything in terms of penalties or interest. But nowadays this isn’t such a good idea.
The new penalty system is designed to impose errors when the tax itself is wrong. However, penalties can be reduced according to a number of factors, including if the business has a good compliance history. Repeated errors which the business ignores will normally be taken as a sign of carelessness and a factor in whether or not to suspend penalties when VAT errors do occur. This could include anything from consistently overclaiming input tax on expenses to getting the boxes 8 and 9 figures wrong.
So a little attention to compliance now could save money by reducing penalties when most needed.
HMRC Guidance
HMRC have produced some very helpful guidance here http://tinyurl.com/m6zedu on their website about VAT visits and it’s worth reading through this if you think that you need any further information about the subject.