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UK VAT Flat Rate Scheme

The Flat Rate Scheme (FRS) was once a major tax-saving lever for service-based small businesses. The 2017 "limited cost trader" reform closed the most lucrative use cases, but FRS still saves money for some businesses. Here's the 2026/27 mechanic and when it actually beats standard VAT accounting.

The Flat Rate Scheme (FRS) simplifies VAT for small businesses (turnover below £150k). You charge customers 20% VAT as normal, but pay HMRC a flat percentage of your gross turnover (typically 12-16.5% depending on sector). The difference is profit. The 2017 "limited cost trader" rule means most service-based businesses now pay 16.5% — eliminating the savings vs standard VAT. FRS still benefits businesses with significant taxable inputs in a low FRS-sector (e.g. catering at 12.5% with VAT-exempt food inputs). The 1% first-year discount adds further savings. Always run the maths both ways before joining or leaving — switching the wrong way costs real money.

How the FRS actually works

Standard VAT accounting:

Flat Rate Scheme:

The difference between the 20% you charged and the FRS percentage you pay is yours to keep (or covers your input VAT).

The sector percentages (2026/27)

Business sectorFRS rate
Limited cost trader (catch-all if you don't meet sector criteria)16.5%
Catering services12.5%
Retailing food, confectionery, tobacco4.0%
Retailing newspapers, books7.5%
Pubs6.5%
Hotel / accommodation10.5%
Hairdressing / beauty13%
IT consultancy, computer repair14.5%
Construction services9.5%
Architects, accountants, surveyors14.5%
Management consultancy14%
Real estate (property letting/management)12%
Photography11%
Estate agents12%
Wholesale (food)7.5%
Manufacturing (food)9.5%

Plus first-year users get a 1% discount on their sector rate (e.g. 14.5% becomes 13.5% in year 1).

The "limited cost trader" rule — the 2017 reform

From April 2017, HMRC introduced the "Limited Cost Trader" (LCT) definition. If you meet the LCT criteria, you must pay 16.5% regardless of your business sector.

You are a "limited cost trader" if your VAT-bearing goods are:

This effectively forces most service-based freelancers (consultants, designers, copywriters, etc.) onto the 16.5% rate — close to or above the standard VAT rate they'd pay anyway.

Worked example — Service consultancy

£60,000 turnover, IT consultancy, mostly remote, minimal physical inputs

Annual turnover (ex-VAT)£60,000
VAT charged (20%)£12,000
Gross turnover (inc VAT)£72,000
FRS sector rate for IT consultancy14.5%
BUT: minimal VAT-bearing goods → LCT applies → 16.5%
VAT paid to HMRC: £72,000 × 16.5%£11,880
FRS surplus (kept): £12,000 - £11,880£120
Year-1 discount: £72,000 × 15.5%£11,160
Year-1 FRS surplus£840

For this LCT consultant, FRS saves £120/year (£840 in year 1). Not nothing but not transformative. Now compare to a catering business:

£80,000 turnover, catering business with £15k of zero-rated food inputs

Annual turnover (ex-VAT)£80,000
VAT charged on sales (20%)£16,000
Gross turnover (inc VAT)£96,000
VAT-bearing inputs (kitchen equipment, packaging) £8,000 × 20%£1,600 input VAT reclaim under standard accounting
Standard VAT bill: £16,000 - £1,600£14,400
VAT-bearing inputs check: £8,000 < 2% of £96,000 = £1,920? NO. Above threshold → not LCT.
Catering FRS sector rate12.5%
FRS VAT bill: £96,000 × 12.5%£12,000
FRS saving vs standard£2,400/year

For catering with reasonable taxable inputs, FRS still saves materially.

The capital purchase exception

Under FRS, you generally can't reclaim input VAT. But capital purchases over £2,000 (single invoice) are reclaimable. Examples:

This is the FRS user's only reclaim opportunity. Plan large capital purchases through one invoice to capture the threshold.

Joining and leaving FRS

When FRS makes sense in 2026/27

FRS saves money in these patterns:

FRS rarely makes sense for:

Sources and methodology

FRS rates and rules from HMRC published in VAT Flat Rate Scheme guidance. LCT rules from VAT Notice 733. Threshold updates from HMRC Budget announcements. For complex business VAT positions, see the tax adviser editorial recommendation. The methodology page documents sources.

FRS sits on top of being VAT-registered

The Flat Rate Scheme is not an alternative to VAT registration — it is a way of accounting for VAT once you are already registered. So the £90,000 registration threshold still governs whether you are in the VAT system at all. You must register once VAT-taxable turnover exceeds £90,000 on a rolling 12-month basis (the 2026/27 figure); the FRS join and leave limits then sit inside that world:

A business below £90,000 can register voluntarily and still use the FRS — sometimes worthwhile if customers are VAT-registered and the flat-rate surplus is positive. But the scheme only ever applies to a registered business, and you still issue normal 20% VAT invoices to your customers throughout.

FRS vs standard VAT — a clean comparison

Strip the scheme back to its mechanic. On standard VAT you hand HMRC the VAT you charged minus the VAT you were charged. On the FRS you hand over a fixed percentage of your gross (VAT-inclusive) takings and keep the rest — but you give up the right to reclaim input VAT (other than the capital-goods exception above £2,000). Whether FRS wins comes down to one question: is the flat-rate surplus bigger than the input VAT you are giving up the right to reclaim?

Consultant, £70,000 ex-VAT turnoverStandardFRS (16.5%)
VAT charged to clients (20%)£14,000£14,000
Gross turnover (inc VAT)£84,000£84,000
Input VAT reclaimed on costs−£900£0
Flat-rate VAT due (£84,000 × 16.5%)£13,860
VAT paid to HMRC£13,100£13,860

For this low-cost consultant — the textbook limited cost trader — the FRS is actually £760 a year worse than standard accounting, because the 16.5% rate leaves almost no surplus and the small input-VAT reclaim is lost. The 1% first-year discount (15.5%) would flip year one into a modest gain, but the structural answer for most low-cost service firms is that FRS no longer pays. Where a business has a lower sector rate and real taxable inputs (the catering example earlier), the comparison swings the other way.

What counts as FRS turnover (and a cash-based option)

The flat-rate percentage is applied to your VAT-inclusive flat-rate turnover, which is broader than many expect:

That breadth is exactly why the scheme rarely suits businesses with large zero-rated or international sales: you pay the flat percentage on income that carried little or no output VAT in the first place. By default you calculate on an invoice basis, but HMRC also allows a cash-based turnover method, where you apply the flat rate to payments actually received — helpful for cash flow if customers pay slowly, and broadly similar in effect to the standalone Cash Accounting Scheme (which cannot itself be combined with the FRS).

Who it suits, who it doesn't, and the lighter record-keeping

Pulling the threads together for 2026/27:

The genuine upside that survives the 2017 reform is simplicity. Under the FRS you do not have to record and evidence the input VAT on every purchase, so the quarterly return and the underlying bookkeeping are lighter — you still keep your sales records and a VAT account, but the day-to-day burden falls. For a tiny business the time saved can matter as much as the cash. Even so, the rule of thumb stands: run the numbers both ways at least once a year, because a change in your cost base, your sector or your turnover can quietly turn a saving into a loss. The VAT calculator and the broader VAT schemes guide help you check.

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