There may be occasions where your company makes payments on behalf of a client. These payments are known as ‘disbursements’ and have to be treated correctly for VAT purposes.
If your clients are not able to reclaim all their VAT on purchases, it can be beneficial to show these disbursements separately on your invoices. We’ll explain how this process works and the benefits of accounting for disbursements for VAT purposes in this way.
How do disbursements work?
Disbursements are costs incurred by you on behalf of your customers. In essence, you purchase or pay on behalf of the customer and your client becomes the recipient of the item or service, where this item/service is additional to any services or goods you may provide.
When dealing with disbursements:
What’s a good example of a disbursement?
There’s often confusion in business circles around what a disbursement is. To make things clearer, let’s take a look at some examples, to define what IS and what ISN’T a disbursement.
This is even the case for things like train fares where there is no VAT on the ticket. If you charge the costs separately to your customer, you still need to add on VAT. The supply by the railway company was to you, not to your customer.
What are the benefits of charging disbursements?
It can be useful to charge genuine disbursements separately where your customers are not able to reclaim the full amount (or any amount) of VAT from your charges. As an added bonus, in some circumstances, doing this may also keep you below the VAT registration threshold.
Disbursements are an area where people often incorrectly treat recharges and expenses as disbursements. This can happen even when the goods or services involved were clearly not actually supplied to, or for the direct benefit of, the end customer.
Talk to us about accounting for your disbursements
Disbursements are often mistreated. Because of this, the VAT treatment of disbursements is an area HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) is very likely to check in the event of an inspection. If you’ve got it wrong, in addition to paying the uncharged VAT, you may also be liable for interest and penalties. This is an additional cost (and hassle) that you definitely don’t need.
We’ll get you up to speed with accounting for disbursements for VAT purposes. We’ll also help you overcome the issue if you have, inadvertently, misused disbursements in your invoicing.
The post What are disbursements for VAT? appeared first on Fortuous.
Fortuous