Paying VAT on a used boat in Europe

Hardly a correction, more additional information that might be useful to somebody in a different situation from the OP. Have not "misled" anybody.

As I think you know there are other factors to take into account, for example you could qualify your simplistic statement by referring to returning resident relief which might allow the boat to be brought back into the EU without paying VAT if the buyer is eligible.

If anybody is interested in the finer details of VAT in relation to boats they can always read the RYA and HMRC material on the subject.

Here we go again :rolleyes:

...For those interested, here is another thread concerning VAT and boats. Tranona likes to refer people to the RYA and HMRC to support his arguments but when HMRC is quoted and referenced he then changes his tune. Read the whole thread here http://www.ybw.com/forums/showthread.php?t=338104
 
Last edited:
Have you personal experience of taking a yacht abroad of this age?

My boat was built in 1984/5, so right on the cusp of the VAT requirement. I do not have any VAT-paid paperwork although I have photocopies of the stage payment receipts dating from the boat's build.

The boat has not been based in UK since mid-1997. We lived and sailed in Holland until the end of 2003, since when we have sailed steadily to Greece via Belgium, UK, France, Spain, Italy. We have been approached or boarded by customs and other officials many times for the purposes of showing documents. None has shown the slightest interest in VAT status, bill of sale or anything other than registration, ICC and insurance.
 
My boat was built in 1984/5, so right on the cusp of the VAT requirement. I do not have any VAT-paid paperwork although I have photocopies of the stage payment receipts dating from the boat's build.

The boat has not been based in UK since mid-1997. We lived and sailed in Holland until the end of 2003, since when we have sailed steadily to Greece via Belgium, UK, France, Spain, Italy. We have been approached or boarded by customs and other officials many times for the purposes of showing documents. None has shown the slightest interest in VAT status, bill of sale or anything other than registration, ICC and insurance.

Indeed - it is a charming myth that customs officials show any interest in VAT status. There are cases were belligerence or obvious suspicions have been raised and further enquiries made, but for private owners channel hopping on yachts a few years old there is truly no issue whatsoever. If anyone at all on this forum has first hand (not 'my mate' or 'I heard') evidence then I challenge them to present it. I have been asked for ship's papers on a number of occasions but never once has VAT been raised and at the time the yacht was 10 years old. We now have a 1977 special so not a myth that applies to us anymore.
 
Here we go again :rolleyes:

...For those interested, here is another thread concerning VAT and boats. Tranona likes to refer people to the RYA and HMRC to support his arguments but when HMRC is quoted and referenced he then changes his tune. Read the whole thread here http://www.ybw.com/forums/showthread.php?t=338104

I do not "change my tune" - certainly not as a consequence of anything that you say. I have read everything you have referred to and it does not change my views, which are well supported by what happens in practice. If you prefer to belief the myths that is your affair.

What HMRC "quote" is not necessarily the law and is often contradictory - simply because many of their statements have not been tested in the courts and are often an expression of what they would like it to be rather than what is.

Just to make it clear. A private person cannot commit a VAT offence except if they import a boat into the EU without declaring it. VAT offences can only be committed otherwise by VAT registered entities.

People who have difficulty with customs authorities over VAT will be suspected of not accounting for VAT properly which means they are either smugglers or VAT registered entities who need to show they have accounted for VAT correctly.

People who legally own boats which they bought in a transaction that was not a chargeable event have nothing to fear.
 
It may be possible to reclaim VAT if the boat is sold outside the EU - it is possible to do this if you buy a new boat, but the rules are very specific and intended to cover the export of new boats, so you would need to seek specialist advice as to whether it is possible in this scenario. Exporting to Croatia would not help you as that state is in the process of joining the EU and will be applying VAT to any boats in its territory.
It would help to the tune of 15% of the boats selling price if the 5% special offer on VAT in Croatia can be made to apply.

Boo2
 
Have you personal experience of taking a yacht abroad of this age?
I haven't and it wold be good to know that I am not going to find my boat impounded in an EU country because they choose to interpret regulations differently. I know what the RYA say, but every year we hear of people being caught out by petty jobs worths. I have not documents other than my SSR number and a Bill of Sale, nothing to say when it was built either.
I'd really like to hear from anyone who has had any experience of this situation.
Thanks for all you input BTW.

You have a few independent accounts here confirming that foreign authorities are not interested in general in VAT on visiting boats. You will find the same in the survey carried out by the RYA and in many reports from liveaboard cruisers who travel all over the EU. Literally hundreds of people take their boats to Europe every year without any problems.

This does not mean that foreign officials, just like HMRC do not act against people they suspect of VAT offences in relation to boats. There are many possible offences usually related to wealthy people trying to arrange their affairs such that they can continue to use their boats privately in the EU without paying VAT or reducing the amount they pay. This usually involves offshore ownership or leasing arrangements, or simply reclaiming VAT on the boat as a business asset but using it as a private asset. Some of these arrangements are legal in some countries, others not. Customs are not stupid and concentrate their efforts on identifying such potential offenders. Why should they waste their time on somebody like you with a 40 year old boat worth £2k when there is not the remotest possibility you have committed any offence, nor do they have any right to charge you VAT.

Just as an example, I purchased my boat through a perfectly legal scheme in Greece which enabled me to effectively halve the amount of VAT I paid. The scheme is legal in Greece and I have a receipt showing the amount of VAT I paid. I also have confirmation from the Greek company that arranged it that the scheme has Greek customs approval. It is unlikely that HMRC would approve a similar scheme in the UK. However, my boat is in the UK perfectly legally and should anybody ever query it the Bill of Sale would show that I bought it in Greece so any issues about VAT would be the responsibility of the Greek authorities. So far nobody has asked. However, when I sell the boat there will be no VAT involved as I am a private citizen and whoever buys the boat can never be liable for any VAT, as the responsibility for accounting for VAT is with the Greek company that sold it to me.

Sorry if it sounds long winded, but although VAT is a very complex subject when you go into all the details, for the vast majority of people like you none of the complexities apply.
 
It would help to the tune of 15% of the boats selling price if the 5% special offer on VAT in Croatia can be made to apply.

Boo2

Not even worth thinking about. The Croatian proposal applies to existing boats in Croatia owned by foreigners who have not paid VAT (because Croatia was outside the EU) and wish to continue to keep their boats in Croatia. It is conditional on registering the boat in Croatia and is only available for a short period. It is a way of encouraging foreigners not to take their boats out of the country. The notion that they would apply it to a boat that is in another non EU country just to get a bit of tax (as suggested by some) is fanciful. The EU would come down on them like a ton of bricks.
 
VAT
I rang the VAT and offered to pay VAT on a yacht. As there was no paper work but the the BIll of Sale. They told me I couldn't pay any! They had no way for me to pay VAT voluntarily, saying that I would only become liable if I took it out of the country, then it would be liable in either the EU ccountry I visited or back here in the UK if I took it out to a non EU country and came back. I suggested that I took it to the Channel Islands and came back at which time It would be liable for VAT and be able to pay it and get my VAT certificate. That flummoxd them completely. BTW the yacht is worth only £2000. I did point out that there web site said that since I had a Bill of sale between two British citizens and a SSR number that their website said that it was the buisness under the UK Customs Authorities, at which point they passed me to the Customs office.. They said that as I had never been out of Britain It was the VAT office that should deal with it!
BTW I could also sail to Isle of Man and back as that is not in the EU either.

Bought a boat in USA and sailed it home to Canada.
I arrived on a Sunday.
phoned Customs from port of entry. they told me to just take it home and bring it back on monday.
They seam to have simmilar training program.:D
 
Not even worth thinking about. The Croatian proposal applies to existing boats in Croatia owned by foreigners who have not paid VAT (because Croatia was outside the EU) and wish to continue to keep their boats in Croatia. It is conditional on registering the boat in Croatia and is only available for a short period. It is a way of encouraging foreigners not to take their boats out of the country. The notion that they would apply it to a boat that is in another non EU country just to get a bit of tax (as suggested by some) is fanciful. The EU would come down on them like a ton of bricks.

Tranona, when you say "applies to existing boats in Croatia owned by foreigners who have not paid VAT (because Croatia was outside the EU) and wish to continue to keep their boats in Croatia" it implies that 1. the Croatian proposal applies to boats already present in Croatia as we speak and 2. it applies only to boats that will continue to be kept in Croatia. None of these are correct.

As for the last part, I wouldn't call it fanciful but let's not spin off the thread :) .

P.S. I think we already discussed on another topic the possibility to do the papers in a EU country while the boat is in a non-EU country and we agreed this was somewhere in the grey zone.
 
Last edited:
Here we go again

...For those interested, here is another thread concerning VAT and boats. Tranona likes to refer people to the RYA and HMRC to support his arguments but when HMRC is quoted and referenced he then changes his tune. Read the whole thread here http://www.ybw.com/forums/showthread.php?t=338104
I do not "change my tune"

Yes you do.

Anyone interested should read this thread or just jump to my summary of Tranona changing his tune in post #103 of the same thread.

For any newbies reading this I suggest you be wary of anything you read on this forum from Tranona relating to VAT (or broker's client accounts) because Tranona's specialist subjects are anything to do with preserving the status quo of the marine industry.
 
Yes you do.

Anyone interested should read this thread or just jump to my summary of Tranona changing his tune in post #103 of the same thread.

For any newbies reading this I suggest you be wary of anything you read on this forum from Tranona relating to VAT (or broker's client accounts) because Tranona's specialist subjects are anything to do with preserving the status quo of the marine industry.

Well, Bill, you are becoming a tiresome person because of your inability to read what is written.

You constantly refer to a boat being held in Spain over VAT issues and then being released after some time as evidence that lack of a VAT invoice on a boat bought privately in the UK might face problems.

It is nothing of the sort. You will recall, if you had bothered to read all of the information provided by others that very little was known about that case other than it was a boat, in Spain and there appeared to be some VAT irregularity which was sorted out. Hardly FACTS on which to comment about what the issues were.

VAT transactions involving boats are being investigated all the time - just not those related to boats bought privately from EU residents in the UK - simply because VAT is not involved. Similarly other states have no jurisdiction over such transactions so cannot take any of the actions you describe. If the Spanish authorities have investigated a boat it is because they suspect an offence has been committed that is within their jurisdiction.

You do seem to have difficulty in understanding that VAT is about transactions and not boats. Unless you have the facts about the transaction you cannot make any meaningful comment about whether an offence has been committed or not. You also need to understand that with the exception of a transaction that involved the private import of a boat from outside the EU it is impossible for a private individual to commit a VAT offence, nor to have any liability for unpaid VAT.

I really am sorry you seem so confused about these issues. I have tried to explain it as simply as possible. I have not "changed my tune" one little bit - I have simply rejected your example and explained why I have rejected it, because it does not show what you think it does. If you can provide a well evidenced example that somebody who owns a boat bought privately in the UK has ever been fined or had his boat impounded just because he did not have a VAT invoice, I will happily change my view.

BTW exactly the same with Brokers and client accounts. Would be interested to see evidence that a broker has stolen money from a client account. Have asked this many times in the interminable threads on the subject - and yet nobody has been able to provide a case. Does not mean that the risk does not exist, although less likely in recent times because of the clarification of structure of trust accounts.

Can't actually make sense of your last sentence, but my position is nothing to do with defending a status quo, it is simply countering the myths that exist without any substantiation from the people who promulgate the myth!

I am sure other people who read this are quite capable of making up their own minds about what makes sense and what does not, so will give your "warning" the weight it deserves.
 
Top