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Billable expenses - VAT Return

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    Billable expenses - VAT Return

    Hi all

    I've been using Quickbooks 2008 to run the company accounts, which is the most unstable software product I have ever encountered (including Microsoft).

    Anyway, I'm trying to file a VAT return for the last quarter and it's including my billable expenses on the return (I guess this is because I included them on an invoice). This is the first contract I've won with billable expenses and I just wanted to clarify that expenses (hotels, travel) should not be included in the sales for that quarter?

    If not, how do I adjust the sales figure in QB ... unfortunately the Quickbooks web site is down ... unbelievable crock-a-tulipe!

    Thanks...

    JR

    #2
    Originally posted by Rudster View Post
    Hi all

    I've been using Quickbooks 2008 to run the company accounts, which is the most unstable software product I have ever encountered (including Microsoft).

    Anyway, I'm trying to file a VAT return for the last quarter and it's including my billable expenses on the return (I guess this is because I included them on an invoice). This is the first contract I've won with billable expenses and I just wanted to clarify that expenses (hotels, travel) should not be included in the sales for that quarter?

    If not, how do I adjust the sales figure in QB ... unfortunately the Quickbooks web site is down ... unbelievable crock-a-tulipe!

    Thanks...

    JR
    O though they were included eg:

    Onvoice to Client:

    Work Done = £10,000
    Expenses = £2,000
    VAT = £2100 [ 17.5% of 12k ]
    Invoice amount to client = £14,100

    so then when you make you VAT return you pay to HMRC the £14,100 or whatever the amount is based on FRS.
    Cenedl heb iaith, cenedl heb galon

    Comment


      #3
      Ah OK,

      The company is on the FRS, so example to clarify...

      --- Calculations

      Net sales £9,000
      Exp inc VAT £1,000 (Hotels / Toll)
      Exp not VAT £1,000 (Mileage)

      Net total £ 11,000
      VAT £ 1,750 (of £10k)

      GROSS SALES £ 12,750
      (VATABLE GROSS £11,750

      FRS VAT £1,527.50 (VAT GROSS * 13%)

      --- VAT Return

      Box 5 = £1,527.50
      Box 6 = £11,000

      ---

      ... is that right?

      Ta... JR

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Rudster View Post
        Ah OK,

        The company is on the FRS, so example to clarify...

        --- Calculations

        Net sales £9,000
        Exp inc VAT £1,000 (Hotels / Toll)
        Exp not VAT £1,000 (Mileage)

        Net total £ 11,000
        VAT £ 1,750 (of £10k)

        GROSS SALES £ 12,750
        (VATABLE GROSS £11,750

        FRS VAT £1,527.50 (VAT GROSS * 13%)

        --- VAT Return

        Box 5 = £1,527.50
        Box 6 = £11,000

        ---

        ... is that right?

        Ta... JR
        I was under the impression that if you bill the client for "expenses" then these form part of the service you provide, and therefore you charge VAT on them.

        So in your scenario, you invoice £11k, the VAT you invoice is £1925, the VAT you pay is [ 13% of 12925 ] = £1680.25

        But I'm not an accountant and I'd check the bit about non-vatable expenses...
        Cenedl heb iaith, cenedl heb galon

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by Bluebird View Post
          I was under the impression that if you bill the client for "expenses" then these form part of the service you provide, and therefore you charge VAT on them.
          It can be so, but it ain't necessarily so.

          Did the client agree to reimburse your expenses, or to allow you to add the amounts to your invoice? These are the 2 quite different choices. Each is in itself valid, but what was agreed?

          Comment


            #6
            totally correct bluebird

            I used to bill a client re-chargable expenses in exactly the same way (I paid for my car hire, hotel etc in advance for the month then they paid me it back)

            Ok heres what to do (example)

            consultancy £10,000
            re-chargable expenses £2,000

            total £12,000
            vat @ 17.5% on £12,000 = £2,100

            invoice total £14,100

            so HMRC will expect £2,100 to be paid back for that invoice

            unless you're on the flat rate scheme. You should run everything by your accountant though, thats what you pay them for

            Comment


              #7
              "re-chargable" expenses and "expenses" are two completely separate things.

              One the client pays you back for and the other is expenses your ltd co has incurred

              Comment


                #8
                Up to now, I have just added the expenses to the bottom of the service invoice, but the client has now asked me to invoice them seperately.

                To be honest, the client is flexible ... so what would you recommend?

                So in your scenario, you invoice £11k, the VAT you invoice is £1925, the VAT you pay is [ 13% of 12925 ] = £1680.25
                ... surely mileage is exclusive of VAT as the supplier (employee) is not VAT registered and therefore should not be included in the FRS calc?

                Ta...

                JR

                Comment


                  #9
                  QB can't cope with FRS - that's why I'm dumping it now I'm afraid...
                  "I can put any old tat in my sig, put quotes around it and attribute to someone of whom I've heard, to make it sound true."
                  - Voltaire/Benjamin Franklin/Anne Frank...

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by cojak View Post
                    QB can't cope with FRS - that's why I'm dumping it now I'm afraid...
                    ... it is possible to do it using VAT adjustments but it's a pain

                    To be honest, I think I may revert to an Excel file combined and the HMRC tools.

                    JR

                    Comment

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