Cash accounting enables a business to account for and pay VAT on the basis of cash received and paid rather than on the basis of invoices issued and received.
The advantages of the scheme are as follows.
The potential disadvantages are as follows.
From 1 April 2007 a business can join the scheme if it has reasonable grounds for believing that taxable turnover in the next 12 months will not exceed £1,350,000 provided that it:
All standard and zero-rated supplies count towards the £1,350,000 except anticipated sales of capital assets previously used within the business. Exempt supplies are excluded.
When a business joins the scheme, it must be careful not to account again for VAT on any amounts already dealt with previously on the basis of invoices issued and received.
A business can start using the scheme without informing HMRC. It does not cover:
Once annual turnover reaches £1,600,000 the business must leave the scheme immediately.
On leaving the scheme, VAT is due on all supplies on which it has not already been accounted for. However outstanding VAT can be accounted for on a cash basis for a further six months after leaving the scheme.
Output tax must be accounted for when payment is received.
Cheque. Treated as received on the date the cheque is received or if later the date on the cheque. If the cheque is not honoured an adjustment can be made.
Credit/debit card. Treated as received/paid on the date of the sales voucher.
Standing order/direct debits. Treated as received/paid on the day the bank account is credited.
Part payments. VAT must be accounted for on all receipts/payments even where they are part payments. Part payments are allocated to invoices in date order (earliest first) and any part payment of an invoice allocated to VAT by making a fair and reasonable apportionment.
Under the cash accounting scheme the prime record will be a cash book summarising all payments made and received with a separate column for VAT. The payments need to be clearly cross-referenced to the appropriate purchase/sales invoice.
In addition the normal requirements regarding copies of VAT invoices and evidence of input tax apply.
We can advise on whether the cash accounting scheme would be suitable for your business.
4.1 An introduction to VAT
4.2 VAT annual accounting scheme
4.3 VAT - cash accounting
4.4 VAT flat rate scheme
4.5 VAT - bad debt relief
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