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VAT Registration in the UK: When, Why & How (2026 Guide)

1 May 2026 · Tax Falcon

UK business owner reviewing VAT paperwork on a laptop with a notebook and pen

VAT registration is the single most-misunderstood compliance event in the UK SME calendar. Register too late and HMRC hits you with backdated VAT plus penalties. Register too early without thinking through the scheme choice and you erode your margins. This 2026 guide walks through the threshold rules, voluntary registration, the four schemes, and the registration process step by step.

Quick facts (2026)

  • VAT registration threshold: £90,000 turnover (rolling 12 months).
  • Deregistration threshold: £88,000.
  • How long does HMRC take? 30 working days on average; some applications take 6–8 weeks.
  • Mandatory MTD compliance from registration.
  • Voluntary registration below threshold is sometimes worth it — especially if your customers are VAT-registered.

The current UK VAT threshold (2026)

The UK VAT registration threshold rose from £85,000 to £90,000 on 1 April 2024 — the first increase in seven years. The deregistration threshold (where you can voluntarily come off the VAT register) is £88,000.

The threshold applies to your VAT-taxable turnover, not your profit. That’s gross sales of goods and services that would be subject to VAT if you were registered (excluding any VAT-exempt supplies). For most UK businesses, this is the same as their headline revenue.

When you MUST register (compulsory registration)

You must register for UK VAT if either of the following is true:

1. The historic test (rolling 12-month rule)

Your VAT-taxable turnover in the past 12 months has gone over £90,000. The clock is rolling — you’re not just looking at your tax year, you’re looking at any 12-month period.

If you cross the threshold, you must register within 30 days of the end of the month in which you exceeded it. The registration takes effect from the first day of the second month after that.

Example: If your rolling 12-month turnover crossed £90,000 on 18 May 2026, you must register by 30 June 2026, and you’ll be VAT-registered from 1 July 2026.

2. The forward look test (30-day rule)

You expect your taxable turnover in the next 30 days alone to exceed £90,000. This catches sudden one-off events — a big contract signing, a viral product launch — where you can foresee crossing the threshold imminently.

If the forward test triggers, you must register by the date you became aware, and registration is effective from that date.

The exception: temporary blip

If you cross £90,000 but can demonstrate to HMRC that your turnover will fall back below £88,000 in the next 12 months, you can request exception from registration. This is genuinely useful for businesses with one-off spikes (e.g., a freelancer who lands a single big project) — but you must apply proactively and provide evidence. Don’t assume it’ll be granted.

When you SHOULD consider voluntary registration (below threshold)

Plenty of businesses register voluntarily before they hit £90,000. Reasons it’s worth doing:

  • Your customers are VAT-registered. If you sell B2B and your customers can reclaim the VAT you charge, registering gains you 20% more reclaimable input VAT with no impact on what your customers pay.
  • You have significant input VAT to reclaim. If you’re spending heavily on equipment, software, or stock, registering lets you reclaim 20% on those inputs.
  • You want the “professional” signal. A VAT number on your invoices and website signals scale and legitimacy. For consultancies and agencies pitching enterprise clients, this matters.
  • You’re approaching the threshold. Registering early avoids the panic of crossing it mid-year.

Reasons it’s not worth doing:

  • Your customers are mostly consumers (B2C) who can’t reclaim VAT — registering effectively raises your prices by 20% or eats your margin by 20%.
  • Your input VAT is minimal (e.g., a service business with few expenses).
  • You’re planning to stay small and don’t want quarterly compliance.

How to register — the actual process

You register for UK VAT online via your HMRC business tax account. Here’s what you need:

  1. A Government Gateway account — sign in or create one at gov.uk.
  2. Your business details — UTR (sole trader) or company registration number (limited company), turnover figures, bank details for refunds.
  3. Date of registration — either the threshold trigger date or your chosen voluntary date.
  4. Scheme choice — Standard, Flat Rate, Cash Accounting, or Annual Accounting (covered below).
  5. Approximately 20–40 minutes to complete the application.

HMRC processes most applications within 30 working days. You’ll receive a VAT registration certificate by post (or in your online account if you opted in to digital communications), confirming your VAT number and effective registration date.

Important: you can charge VAT before HMRC confirms

If your registration is delayed but your effective date has passed, you can’t legally charge VAT on invoices yet (you don’t have a VAT number to put on them). Instead, you raise invoices at VAT-inclusive prices with no VAT line, then re-issue them with VAT once your number arrives. This is awkward but standard — HMRC’s guidance covers it.

Approaching the VAT threshold?

We file VAT registrations within 24 hours of your decision and usually have HMRC’s response in 2–3 weeks. Includes scheme advice and MTD setup.

See Our VAT Service →

Choosing a VAT scheme

Standard VAT

The default. You charge 20% (or 5% / 0% on specific goods) on every sale, reclaim VAT paid on inputs, and submit the difference quarterly. Best for most growing businesses with regular input VAT.

Flat Rate Scheme (FRS)

Eligible if turnover is under £150,000 (excluding VAT). You pay HMRC a flat percentage of your gross turnover (typically 7.5%–16.5% depending on sector) and don’t reclaim input VAT. Simpler bookkeeping, but worse for businesses with high input VAT.

The “limited cost trader” rule introduced in 2017 forces businesses with low goods spend (under 2% of turnover) onto a 16.5% flat rate, which is rarely beneficial. Many service businesses (consultancies, agencies) ended up worse off and left FRS as a result.

Cash Accounting

Eligible if turnover is under £1.35 million. You only account for VAT when money actually moves — VAT on sales is due when customers pay you (not when you invoice), VAT on purchases is reclaimable when you pay your suppliers. Helpful for cash flow, especially if you have late-paying customers.

Annual Accounting

Eligible if turnover is under £1.35 million. You file one annual VAT return instead of four quarterly ones, and pay HMRC in nine equal monthly instalments plus a balancing payment. Reduces admin but means you can’t reclaim refunds quickly.

Which scheme should you pick?

Defaults that work for most businesses:

  • Service business, low expenses: Standard VAT. FRS used to be attractive but the limited cost trader rules killed it for most.
  • Product business with stock and equipment: Standard VAT.
  • Cash-tight business with slow-paying clients: Standard VAT + Cash Accounting.
  • Tiny one-person consultancy with predictable income: FRS at 14.5% may save a few hundred pounds a year — run the numbers carefully.
UK business owner reviewing VAT paperwork on a laptop
Most UK businesses pick the Standard scheme — simpler than it sounds once you’ve got proper bookkeeping software in place.

Common mistakes and how to avoid them

1. Missing the threshold by accident

Tracking turnover monthly is essential. Many sole traders only realise they crossed £90,000 when they prepare their year-end accounts — by which point they’ve been trading without VAT for 6+ months and HMRC’s penalty regime applies.

The fix: set up rolling-12-month turnover tracking in your accounting software. Xero, QuickBooks, and FreeAgent all have built-in VAT threshold alerts.

2. Charging VAT without a number

You must not show VAT on invoices before HMRC confirms your registration. Add an explanatory note to your sales process: “Pricing inclusive of VAT once registration is confirmed”.

3. Not separating VAT-exempt supplies

If you have a mix of VAT-able and VAT-exempt income (e.g., a property business with rental + management services, or insurance brokers), you’ll need partial exemption calculations. Get specialist advice early.

4. Reclaiming VAT on disallowed inputs

You can’t reclaim VAT on entertainment (most cases), most cars (unless 100% business use), or supplies used for VAT-exempt activities. Common error in DIY bookkeeping.

5. Late returns and points-based penalties

Since January 2023, late VAT returns earn points. Hit four points (for quarterly filers) and a £200 penalty kicks in, with another £200 for each subsequent late return while at threshold. Late payment attracts separate penalties starting at 2% from day 16 of being late.

After registration — your ongoing duties

  • File quarterly VAT returns via MTD-compliant software within one month and seven days of each quarter end.
  • Pay any VAT owed by the same deadline.
  • Keep digital records for at least 6 years.
  • Issue VAT-compliant invoices showing your VAT number, the rate, and the VAT amount.
  • Re-check your scheme annually — what made sense at registration may not at £400k turnover.

Frequently asked questions

Can I deregister if my turnover drops?

Yes — if your taxable turnover in the next 12 months is expected to be below the deregistration threshold of £88,000, you can apply to deregister. HMRC will require you to account for VAT on any business assets you keep (worth over £6,000 at deregistration), so it’s not always a clean exit.

Should I voluntarily register if I’m under threshold?

Run the maths: estimate annual input VAT (purchases × 20%) and weigh against the cost of either passing 20% onto B2C customers or absorbing it. For B2B businesses with VAT-registered customers, voluntary registration nearly always wins. For consumer-facing service businesses, it usually doesn’t.

How long does HMRC take to register me?

The published target is 30 working days, but actual times vary. Currently averaging 4–6 weeks. Complex applications (overseas businesses, cross-border supplies, specific schemes) can take 8+ weeks. Plan ahead.

Do I charge VAT on overseas sales?

Depends on what you’re selling and to whom:

  • Goods to non-EU consumers: Zero-rated as exports.
  • Goods to EU consumers: Use OSS / IOSS — see our Amazon FBA guide for the detail.
  • Services to overseas businesses: Often outside the scope of UK VAT (place of supply rules apply).
  • Digital services to EU consumers: Subject to local VAT in the customer’s country, via OSS.

What’s “reverse charge” VAT?

A mechanism where, for certain B2B cross-border supplies (and some domestic ones like construction services), the buyer accounts for both the output VAT and the input VAT on their own return — a wash transaction in cash terms. Usually relevant if you buy services from overseas suppliers (e.g., AWS hosting, foreign consultants).

The bottom line

Get your VAT registration timing right, pick the right scheme for your business model, and put MTD-compliant software in place from day one. Done well, registration should take an afternoon of setup and add no real friction to your business. Done badly, it’s the most common source of HMRC penalties for UK SMEs.

If you want this off your desk entirely, our tax service handles VAT registration, scheme selection, and ongoing returns from £99/month. Or book a free 15-minute call to talk through whether voluntary registration makes sense for your business.

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