ÀÏ˾»úÎçÒ¹¸£Àû

Agricultural flat rate scheme (AFRS) ― operating the scheme

Produced by a Tolley Value Added Tax expert
Value Added Tax
Guidance

Agricultural flat rate scheme (AFRS) ― operating the scheme

Produced by a Tolley Value Added Tax expert
Value Added Tax
Guidance
imgtext

This guidance note covers how to operate the agricultural flat rate scheme (AFRS). The scheme is sometimes also referred to as the famers’ flat rate scheme and the flat rate scheme for farmers.

For an overview of the AFRS more broadly, see the Agricultural flat rate scheme (AFRS) ― overview guidance note.

For in-depth commentary on the legislation and case law relating to the operation of the AFRS, see De Voil Indirect Tax Service V2.194 and V2.197.

Operating the AFRS - the basics

A farmer operating the agricultural flat rate scheme (AFRS) does not recover input tax on their business costs. Instead, it charges a flat rate addition of 4% on its farming activities when it makes supplies to VAT registered customers. The farmer retains this addition, in effect compensating for the lack of VAT recovery.

The VAT registered customer who is charged the flat rate addition may also recover this as if it were normal input tax.

No VAT or flat rate addition is charged by the farmer

Continue reading the full document
To gain access to additional expert tax guidance, workflow tools, generative tax AI, and tax research, register for a free trial of Tolley+â„¢
Powered by

Popular Articles

Reverse charge ― buying in services from outside the UK

Reverse charge ― buying in services from outside the UKThis guidance note covers the reverse charge that applies to services that have been bought in from outside the UK. For an overview of VAT and international services more broadly, see the International services ― overview guidance note. For

15 Dec 2020 14:02 | Produced by Tolley Read more Read more

Exemption ― insurance ― overview

Exemption ― insurance ― overviewThis guidance note provides an overview of the VAT treatment of insurance products and should be read in conjunction with the Insurance ― specific transactions and Exemption ― insurance ― brokers and agents guidance notes.Is insurance exempt from VAT?Supplies of

Read more Read more

VAT registration ― artificial separation of business activities (disaggregation)

VAT registration ― artificial separation of business activities (disaggregation)This guidance note should be read in conjunction with the VAT registration ― compulsory guidance note and is relevant to persons established or resident in the UK. Persons that are not established or resident in the UK

14 Jul 2020 13:57 | Produced by Tolley Read more Read more