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VAT: Selling Goods On Interest Free Credit

Shared from Tax Insider: VAT: Selling Goods On Interest Free Credit
By Andrew Needham, June 2018

Andrew Needham looks always of reducing the amount of VAT due when selling on interest-free credit.


There are two ways retailers can finance interest-free credit: self-finance where the retailer simply collects payment over an agreed period of time, and finance provided by a third-party finance house. In the latter case, the finance house makes a charge to the retailer for providing ‘interest-free’ credit to their customer. 

If the retailer provides the credit themselves, they can show the credit charge separately on the invoice you issue to your customer; it will then be exempt from VAT and you can reduce the amount of VAT due.

When the customer pays the advertised ticket price the retailer pays the finance house for providing the interest-free credit and this is normally done by the finance house retaining their share and paying the balance over to the retailer. In these circumstances, the retailer receives less that the advertised ticket price.

Example: Interest-free credit through a finance house
A retailer sells goods for £1,000. The finance house charges the retailer £100 for providing their customer with interest-free credit, so the retailer receives £900 for the goods. 

How much VAT is due?
In the above example, is the value of the sale by the retailer for VAT purposes £900 or £1,000?

The leading case on this point is Primback Ltd (LON/92/1142 No 10460; CA [1996] STC 757; ECJ C-34/99; [2001] STC 803). The tribunal held that the value of the goods was that invoiced to the customer. The deduction by the finance house was for interest. The High Court agreed, but the Court of Appeal said the VAT was only due on the sum actually received by Primback via the finance house. The House of Lords then referred the matter to the ECJ, which held that the value of the sale was that agreed between Primback and its customer. 

The Court found it important that the price did not vary whether the customer paid up front or by instalments through the finance house, and that the customer was unaware of the charge made by the finance house to Primback. 

Although Primback might allow a discount for immediate payment, it did not offer this; the customer had to ask for and negotiate it, and it would therefore not necessarily be the same amount as the commission charged by the finance house. The Court saw that commission as an expense of Primback incurred in order to increase its sales and to avoid having to accept payment by instalments.

Therefore, in this example the retailer would have to account for VAT on the £1,000 ticket price not the £900 he actually received.

Are there ways of reducing the VAT?
If you structure the sales agreements correctly, you can reduce the VAT due on interest-free sales financed by a third-party finance house.

The retailer should sell the goods to the finance house at a reduced price (the discount being the same as the interest that would be charged by the finance house), and for the finance house to then sell the goods on to the customer at the retail value. 

In the case of A&D Stevenson (Trading) Ltd (LON/97/696 No 17979), HMRC’s arguments based on Primback were rejected, and a conditional sale agreement was held to involve a sale by the dealer to the finance company, the value of the supply being the sum the retailer actually received (i.e. it was net of the interest charged, not the full sale price agreed with the customer).

Practical Tip:
If you sell goods on interest-free credit you can potentially reduce the VAT due by having a conditional sale agreement with the finance house.

Andrew Needham looks always of reducing the amount of VAT due when selling on interest-free credit.


There are two ways retailers can finance interest-free credit: self-finance where the retailer simply collects payment over an agreed period of time, and finance provided by a third-party finance house. In the latter case, the finance house makes a charge to the retailer for providing ‘interest-free’ credit to their customer. 

If the retailer provides the credit themselves, they can show the credit charge separately on the invoice you issue to your customer; it will then be exempt from VAT and you can reduce the amount of VAT due.

When the customer pays the advertised ticket price the retailer pays the finance
... Shared from Tax Insider: VAT: Selling Goods On Interest Free Credit