VAT q&a: My Abu Dhabi start-up now qualifies for VAT. Can we reclaim any tax paid before registration?
The company has crossed the earnings threshold of Dh375,000 and is unclear on what it can claim
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Article 56 of the Decree Law allows the recovery of input tax paid on
goods, services and imported goods prior to the date of VAT
registration, “provided that these goods and services were used to make
supplies that give the right to input tax recovery upon tax
registration”. Input VAT is the VAT you are charged by your suppliers on
goods and services purchased.This means that you can only recover VAT
paid before registration if VAT charged on the same goods and services
post registration would be recoverable. You should understand the
exclusions to input tax recovery contained in the full decree law and
executive regulations and apply the same rules that apply to input VAT
recovery generally, when determining how much pre registration input VAT
can be offset.
There are four exceptions to this rule listed in the decree law. The
first is receipt of goods and services for purposes other than making
taxable supplies. The next is for input tax related to capital assets
that are already partially depreciated before the date of registration,
for example, if you purchase a fixed asset with an expected life of five
years and when you register for VAT the asset has only two years of use
left, you can only reclaim two fifths of the VAT you originally paid.
The third exception is for services received more than five years prior
to the date of registration. Note this refers to services only, rather
than goods and services.
Finally you cannot reclaim input tax paid if you have moved goods to
another implementing GCC state prior to the registration in that state.
This is because if you supply goods to another GCC state then the
recovery of input tax is permitted only in that other state. Therefore,
to recover input VAT you need to be registered in that other GCC state.
have read about UAE companies receiving invoices without UAE
VAT, where such companies need to record the VAT under the reverse
charge mechanism. In such cases, this means the FTA will not receive any
VAT. Is it logical that some non-resident companies are obliged to
register for and charge VAT but others do not? Is there ambiguity in the
law here? HJ Abu Dhabi
This question highlights why the reverse charge mechanism is a hard
concept to grasp and at first does not seem to make sense. The reverse
charge mechanism applies if you make input and output VAT adjustments on
your VAT return where you have purchased goods or services from an
overseas company and have not been charged VAT.
When considering this, remember the end consumer bears the cost of
VAT not the companies involved in the production chain. The companies
have to charge VAT, but can also reclaim any VAT they are charged.
If a UAE resident company is purchasing services from another UAE
resident company, and both are VAT registered, then the supplier will
charge the recipient company VAT and will pay this over to the FTA on
their next return. Meanwhile, the recipient company will pay the
supplier VAT but will then reclaim this from the FTA on their next
return. So from the FTA’s perspective, there is a zero net effect from
this transaction, albeit that there are equal and opposite actual cash
flows.
If a UAE company buys services from an overseas company that is not
registered for UAE VAT, the UAE recipient company must use the reverse
charge mechanism when accounting for this VAT. They will record equal
and opposite VAT payable and VAT reclaimable on their VAT return. As
these amounts net each other off on the same VAT return, there will not
be any actual movement of cash, but the zero net effect is the same. So
there is no ambiguity in these two scenarios, the net effect for both
the FTA and the UAE-registered company is the same.
For More Information Please Contact Us HERE.
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