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UK VAT for digital services + reverse charge

For UK businesses selling digital services internationally — software, downloads, online courses, SaaS, video streaming — VAT mechanics depend heavily on whether your customer is in the UK, EU, or rest of world, and whether they're a business or consumer. The wrong assumption can lead to under-charging or over-charging by 20%. Here's the 2026/27 mechanic.

5-minute read

For UK businesses providing digital services (software, downloads, online courses, SaaS) to overseas customers, VAT treatment depends on: (1) where the customer is (UK, EU, rest of world), (2) whether B2B or B2C. B2B to non-UK: generally outside UK VAT scope — the customer self-accounts via the reverse charge mechanism. B2C to EU: UK businesses use the EU One-Stop Shop (OSS) registered in one EU member state, charging local VAT rates. B2C to rest of world: generally outside UK VAT scope. B2C to UK: normal 20% UK VAT applies. The "where" rule for digital services follows the customer location, not yours — proven by 2 pieces of non-contradictory evidence (billing address, IP address, payment card country, etc.).

What counts as "digital services"

HMRC's definition (broad):

NOT digital services (different VAT rules apply):

The 4-quadrant matrix

UK customerNon-UK customer
B2B (customer has VAT number)Charge 20% UK VATOutside UK VAT scope. Customer reverse-charges in their country.
B2C (consumer or non-VAT customer)Charge 20% UK VATEU customers: OSS-registered, charge local rate. Non-EU: outside UK VAT scope (often).

B2B to non-UK — the reverse charge

If you sell digital services to a non-UK business that has a VAT number (or local tax registration), the supply is OUTSIDE UK VAT scope. You charge zero VAT.

The customer accounts for VAT in their own country via "reverse charge" — they treat the import as if they'd supplied it to themselves, charging output VAT and reclaiming input VAT simultaneously (net zero for them).

Practical requirements:

B2C to EU — the One-Stop Shop (OSS)

Since 1 July 2021, the EU's OSS scheme allows non-EU businesses to register in ONE EU member state and account for VAT in all 27 member states through a single quarterly return.

Practical workflow:

Alternative: register for VAT in each EU country directly. More admin, sometimes lower cost for high-volume sellers.

B2C to non-EU rest of world

Generally outside UK VAT scope. You don't charge UK VAT. The customer's own country VAT rules may or may not apply (Australia GST, US sales tax, etc.) — depends on the destination and any local registration thresholds.

For most UK small businesses with occasional non-EU consumer sales, the practical reality: don't charge UK VAT, don't worry about local sales tax unless you cross specific thresholds.

Worked example — UK SaaS business

£200,000 turnover SaaS, customer mix: 40% UK, 30% EU B2B, 20% EU B2C, 10% rest of world

UK customers (£80k turnover): charge 20% UK VAT£16,000 UK VAT collected
EU B2B (£60k): outside UK scope, reverse charge applies£0 UK VAT
EU B2C (£40k): OSS registered. Average EU VAT rate ~21%£8,400 EU VAT (paid to OSS member state)
Rest of world (£20k): outside UK scope. Customer local rules may apply.£0 UK VAT (subject to verification)
UK turnover for VAT threshold purposes: £80k + £60k + £40k + £20k = £200kAbove £90k threshold — must register
UK VAT bill (quarterly)£16,000/year
EU VAT bill (OSS, quarterly)£8,400/year

The business charges 20% to UK customers, 21% (averaged) to EU consumers, and zero to EU businesses and rest-of-world. Three VAT regimes simultaneously — typical complexity for a UK SaaS business with international customers.

The "two pieces of evidence" rule for customer location

For B2C digital services, you must establish the customer's location with 2 pieces of non-contradictory evidence:

If 2 agree: that's the customer location. If they disagree: get a 3rd piece. Document your evidence for HMRC audit.

Sources and methodology

Digital services VAT rules from HMRC Notice 741A. EU OSS from European Commission OSS guidance. Reverse charge mechanism from HMRC Notice 741. For complex digital service VAT planning, see the tax adviser editorial recommendation. The methodology page documents sources.

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