- Original Poster
- #1
Hello,
We are a small startup in the UK running for about 2 years now. We're doing well and this year end our revenue was over £300,000.
We hired a chartered accountant in early 2012 to help as we are both clueless on accounting and want to be safe. We seem to be paying him in the region of £1,500 - £3,000 per year.
Here's a short timeline:
On 20th of December 2012 we met with our local MP Vince Cable to discuss VAT as the HMRC website was very out of date about if who we should charge VAT to. We received a letter from the treasury stating that:
We emailed our accountant with a scan of the letter, and these exact bullets asking if our understanding of it was correct or not. He replied "In my opinion your understanding 1-4 below is correct. For number 3 you should obtain their VAT reg. No."
So I book kept with the above understanding. I thought that there are 2 groups of customers, those you charge VAT to and we charge 20% to, and the VAT exempt group. The group we charge VAT to, we only pay 11% VAT on those sales because we are on flat VAT.
Now is our year end (May 2013). I haven't filed any VAT returns with HMRC as I wasn't aware I was meant to be doing this (we got a couple of invoices from HMRC VAT related which I paid, I thought that was all we had to do). I tried to file the Aug-Sep 2012 return, and got stuck on some questions so emailed our accountant for help.
He phoned me back straight away and said:
- We're going to be fined for filing these VAT returns late
- We definitely shouldn't be on flat VAT scheme, the reason being the majority of our sales are VAT exempt.
We're pretty upset now because our accountant has told us that our VAT bill would be considerably smaller if we were NOT on flat VAT. We asked him if we should go on it, he said yes, then we also asked confirmation on our understanding of who we should and shouldn't charge VAT to. Now we're going to be fined a lot by HMRC, and have a much bigger VAT bill than we should have had. I thought our VAT bill would be around £10,000 (as a majority of our sales are VAT exempt) but now we're looking at a VAT bill of £50,000+ because flat VAT apparently applies to ALL sales. Ontop of the £40,000 additional tax we have to now pay for being on the wrong scheme, we are going to be fined a lot of money.
I don't really know what we should do now. He charges £70 p/h and has told us that this could take a while to sort out.
We're just a small startup in the UK and all this VAT stuff is a real pain in the ass, I thought getting an accountant would save us from all this headaches and fines but apparently not.
Do we have a case to contest his fees on the grounds of his advice was bad? It appears he's totally misunderstood our needs as a client. He also appears to be lacking any experience or understanding of our business, we are a software company and we sell globally.
What I expected him to have done:
We just don't know what to do now we're lost
We are a small startup in the UK running for about 2 years now. We're doing well and this year end our revenue was over £300,000.
We hired a chartered accountant in early 2012 to help as we are both clueless on accounting and want to be safe. We seem to be paying him in the region of £1,500 - £3,000 per year.
Here's a short timeline:
- Got an accountant, and set it up so all HMRC correspondence goes to his office
- In June 2012 we emailed our accountant and asked "Should we go ahead and register for flat VAT scheme?"
- Reply from accountant was "Assuming the rate is approved, it would appear to your advantage to use it because your VAT inputs are quite low."
- We registered for VAT as we were over the threshold, and we signed up for Flat VAT at 12%-1% bonus rate
On 20th of December 2012 we met with our local MP Vince Cable to discuss VAT as the HMRC website was very out of date about if who we should charge VAT to. We received a letter from the treasury stating that:
- If the customer is in the UK we always charge VAT
- If the customer is an individual in the EU we charge VAT
- If the customer is a business in the EU we don't charge VAT
- If the customer is outside the EU we don't charge VAT
We emailed our accountant with a scan of the letter, and these exact bullets asking if our understanding of it was correct or not. He replied "In my opinion your understanding 1-4 below is correct. For number 3 you should obtain their VAT reg. No."
So I book kept with the above understanding. I thought that there are 2 groups of customers, those you charge VAT to and we charge 20% to, and the VAT exempt group. The group we charge VAT to, we only pay 11% VAT on those sales because we are on flat VAT.
Now is our year end (May 2013). I haven't filed any VAT returns with HMRC as I wasn't aware I was meant to be doing this (we got a couple of invoices from HMRC VAT related which I paid, I thought that was all we had to do). I tried to file the Aug-Sep 2012 return, and got stuck on some questions so emailed our accountant for help.
He phoned me back straight away and said:
- We're going to be fined for filing these VAT returns late
- We definitely shouldn't be on flat VAT scheme, the reason being the majority of our sales are VAT exempt.
We're pretty upset now because our accountant has told us that our VAT bill would be considerably smaller if we were NOT on flat VAT. We asked him if we should go on it, he said yes, then we also asked confirmation on our understanding of who we should and shouldn't charge VAT to. Now we're going to be fined a lot by HMRC, and have a much bigger VAT bill than we should have had. I thought our VAT bill would be around £10,000 (as a majority of our sales are VAT exempt) but now we're looking at a VAT bill of £50,000+ because flat VAT apparently applies to ALL sales. Ontop of the £40,000 additional tax we have to now pay for being on the wrong scheme, we are going to be fined a lot of money.
I don't really know what we should do now. He charges £70 p/h and has told us that this could take a while to sort out.
We're just a small startup in the UK and all this VAT stuff is a real pain in the ass, I thought getting an accountant would save us from all this headaches and fines but apparently not.
Do we have a case to contest his fees on the grounds of his advice was bad? It appears he's totally misunderstood our needs as a client. He also appears to be lacking any experience or understanding of our business, we are a software company and we sell globally.
What I expected him to have done:
- Understood that our business sales are mostly VAT exempt and tell us that Flat VAT is a bad idea
- If we did go Flat VAT, when we received letter from treasury explaining VAT for us better he should have said "yes it's correct, but it's irrelevant to you as you're on flat VAT". This would have been an acceptable time to spot the problem and resolve it
- Instructed me clearly that I should be filing VAT returns (would he of been receiving letters from HMRC telling him we're late filing the VAT returns? We didn't get anything like that through our door)
We just don't know what to do now we're lost
Last edited: