- Original Poster
- #1
I'm getting frustrated this week with purchases from big names who are clueless on VAT!
Tesco - you have to go to customer services, present your receipt and the write one out. Trouble is, the item costing £119.99 is apparently £96! I pointed out it was actually £100, but they didn't have the maths, just a calculator which removed 20% from the total. I gave up in the end. At Argos, it got worse. £189.99. Can I have a VAT receipt please. Till receipt presented. No - I went on, could I have a VAT receipt with the VAT shown on it. I was reassured by it having a VAT number on the back. I asked for the manager, who understood (hooray) and he pulled out a pad and with his calculator, wrote one out, popped it in the box and away I went to discover it was actually a CREDIT NOTE, in big letters - for £189.99, but with the VAT broken down. They don't even understand the fact the credit note is sort of 'money' - I guess I could go back in a spend it?
So I connected head office with a scan of the credit note - they say it's fine as a VAT receipt, and it's not a credit note, despite being written on a credit note pro forma, signed and dated.
Is it really too much to expect branches and head office to understand really basic accounts? As for Homebase - the promised VAT receipt hasn't come yet as promised?
Even using the simplified invoice rules for the amounts involved, a credit note really is different to a receipt - or am I just expecting too much?
Tesco - you have to go to customer services, present your receipt and the write one out. Trouble is, the item costing £119.99 is apparently £96! I pointed out it was actually £100, but they didn't have the maths, just a calculator which removed 20% from the total. I gave up in the end. At Argos, it got worse. £189.99. Can I have a VAT receipt please. Till receipt presented. No - I went on, could I have a VAT receipt with the VAT shown on it. I was reassured by it having a VAT number on the back. I asked for the manager, who understood (hooray) and he pulled out a pad and with his calculator, wrote one out, popped it in the box and away I went to discover it was actually a CREDIT NOTE, in big letters - for £189.99, but with the VAT broken down. They don't even understand the fact the credit note is sort of 'money' - I guess I could go back in a spend it?
So I connected head office with a scan of the credit note - they say it's fine as a VAT receipt, and it's not a credit note, despite being written on a credit note pro forma, signed and dated.
Is it really too much to expect branches and head office to understand really basic accounts? As for Homebase - the promised VAT receipt hasn't come yet as promised?
Even using the simplified invoice rules for the amounts involved, a credit note really is different to a receipt - or am I just expecting too much?