lb00 Posted December 5 Share Posted December 5 Hi everyone, I’m currently renovating my house and have an agreement with the builder for a price excluding materials. Since the carpenter, who is on site daily and doing most of the work, is a family friend, we agreed with the project manager to pay for materials separately. As a discount arrangement, the agreement was we'd pay for the materials at cost (no markup) upon presentation of receipts. Recently, the project manager asked me to pay for materials—around £1,000 NET i.e. £1,200 GROSS—in cash instead of providing an invoice. He mentioned this would allow us to “save the VAT.” However, he’s asking me to pay the GROSS amount, which includes VAT (£1,200). From my understanding, as a VAT-registered business, he will likely reclaim the VAT from HMRC in his VAT return. This seems like double compensation for the VAT—once from my payment of £1,200 (including VAT) and again by reclaiming the VAT from HMRC. What do you think about this situation? Thanks for your advice! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteamyTea Posted December 5 Share Posted December 5 When you say 'pay cash', do you mean give him notes with no receipt in return? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lb00 Posted December 5 Author Share Posted December 5 8 minutes ago, SteamyTea said: When you say 'pay cash', do you mean give him notes with no receipt in return? Notes with an informal receipt that I paid the materials. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteamyTea Posted December 5 Share Posted December 5 3 minutes ago, lb00 said: Notes with an informal receipt that I paid the materials. Start looking for a new team. If the company you are using is limited, check them, and the directors, out on the companies house website. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ToughButterCup Posted December 5 Share Posted December 5 51 minutes ago, lb00 said: .. He mentioned this would allow us to “save the VAT.”... Rubbish. Bid him Happy Christmas, and bye bye. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lb00 Posted December 5 Author Share Posted December 5 2 hours ago, SteamyTea said: Start looking for a new team. If the company you are using is limited, check them, and the directors, out on the companies house website. 2 hours ago, ToughButterCup said: Rubbish. Bid him Happy Christmas, and bye bye. Thank you for your replies. Just to make sure as perhaps I haven't been clear enough, I will be paying all the work with invoices by bank transfer. The issue above is only regarding the materials for which he has provided receipts and asked me to pay cash. Am I correct in assuming the builder will claim the VAT back on those invoices for the materials he bought?The business is VAT registered. He has accounts with some of these suppliers, some other he has paid by credit card. If his cost for the material is actually the Net price, as he is reclaiming VAT, but he is asking me to pay the gross with VAT even if I pay cash, then it seems to me he is recovering VAT twice, once from HMRC and once from me. Thank you. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mjc55 Posted December 6 Share Posted December 6 you would be correct in your assumption! He pays £1200 but gets £200 back from revenue - cost £1000 You give him £1200 £200 profit to him. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mike Posted December 6 Share Posted December 6 1 hour ago, lb00 said: Am I correct in assuming the builder will claim the VAT back on those invoices for the materials he bought?The business is VAT registered. Yes if he bought them, no if they fell off the back of a lorry. It's also possible that he wants cash to avoid the revenue being visible in his accounts for some reason. Ask for an invoice, buy the materials yourself, or go elsewhere. Preferably the latter. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nod Posted December 6 Share Posted December 6 That is absolutely normal I really don’t understand this If you bought the materials yourself You would still pay the vat Unless the job is reclaimable Is he charging you vat on the labour Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Susie Posted December 6 Share Posted December 6 Your saving the builders mark up on the materials. if he is ordering, possibly collecting, paperwork etc they all have a cost usually also 20% mark up but this will vary by builder. if you want to save money one option would be to get the materials your self and reclaim the VAT if your a new build. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
torre Posted December 6 Share Posted December 6 12 hours ago, lb00 said: informal receipt This isn't for your benefit, it's basically a sign none of that money on the informal receipt is going through the builders accounts. So the whole lot is cash that never goes through the builders books at all and he's avoiding tax and NI contributions on it while still reclaiming the VAT. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alan Ambrose Posted December 6 Share Posted December 6 >>> to avoid the revenue being visible in his accounts for some reason Of course, one reason that small operators like customers to buy materials direct rather than have that ‘revenue’ going through the accounts is to stay below the VAT threshold of £90K. Perfectly legal and it gives them a price advantage in not having to charge customers VAT. Could that be true in this case? A lot of one man bands get a bit confused about VAT also. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
torre Posted December 6 Share Posted December 6 @Alan Ambrose that would be fair enough for the probably not VAT registered carpenter friend, but here it sounds like it's the builder and their PM (definitely VAT registered) issuing the 'informal receipts' and offering to 'save VAT'. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sparrowhawk Posted December 6 Share Posted December 6 @nod is right, but so is everyone else. Require receipts, no cash payments, and keep records. https://www.gov.uk/report-tax-fraud Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alan Ambrose Posted December 6 Share Posted December 6 It’s possible the materials were ones in the builder’s inventory anyway, so they wouldn’t have an actual receipt - at least not for this job. There are, of course, a lot of overages from jobs, good materials removed from old refurb jobs etc which end up as a bonus for the builder. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mjc55 Posted December 6 Share Posted December 6 I think it is rather naive of anyone thinking that this is anything other than the builder not declaring to save money. At least given what the original poster said. Quote Recently, the project manager asked me to pay for materials—around £1,000 NET i.e. £1,200 GROSS—in cash instead of providing an invoice. He mentioned this would allow us to “save the VAT.” Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ToughButterCup Posted December 6 Share Posted December 6 1 hour ago, Sparrowhawk said: @nod is right, but so is everyone else..... Warra a diplomat .... Lets all have pint on @nod tonight and send him the bill ex-VAT Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteamyTea Posted December 6 Share Posted December 6 3 hours ago, ToughButterCup said: Lets all have pint on @nod tonight and send him the bill ex-VAT Can I also pocket the 10/pint reduction in alcohol tax that our Chancellor gave us. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Temp Posted December 6 Share Posted December 6 Is this work being done on a house that is and has been empty for 2 or 10 years? Eg so that it qualifies for reduced VAT? If not then I agree you will have to pay the VAT You can't buy the materials without VAT yourself. They can't buy the materials and sell them to you without VAT (if VAT registered). Being VAT registered allows all companies to reclaim VAT. Next time you buy a dishwasher ask the shop if they will knock the VAT off and see how it goes 🙂 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lb00 Posted December 7 Author Share Posted December 7 Thank you all for your replies. I am more than happy to pay VAT on materials and that was how we settled at the start of the works. Builder gets materials, pays 1200 (1000 net + Vat), sends me receipts and I pay straight away the 1200. Now what he said is: "to save you the VAT give me the 1200 in cash instead of through bank transfer". I have no objection to paying the full 1200 and it is indeed what I expected and was prepared to pay. What I don't like is that he is taking me for a ride when arguing he will save me the VAT by paying cash. The reason for this I guess is that he is getting the money for my materials in cash, issuing no invoice, and still reclaiming VAT on those materials. So he effectively paid for them the net (1000) whereas I pay 1,200 and he pockets the 200£. That I am not liking at all as he is breaking the trust relationship. Thank you. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mjc55 Posted December 7 Share Posted December 7 Just now, lb00 said: Thank you all for your replies. I am more than happy to pay VAT on materials and that was how we settled at the start of the works. Builder gets materials, pays 1200 (1000 net + Vat), sends me receipts and I pay straight away the 1200. Now what he said is: "to save you the VAT give me the 1200 in cash instead of through bank transfer". I have no objection to paying the full 1200 and it is indeed what I expected and was prepared to pay. What I don't like is that he is taking me for a ride when arguing he will save me the VAT by paying cash. The reason for this I guess is that he is getting the money for my materials in cash, issuing no invoice, and still reclaiming VAT on those materials. So he effectively paid for them the net (1000) whereas I pay 1,200 and he pockets the 200£. That I am not liking at all as he is breaking the trust relationship. Thank you. Exactly, I think this has been clear in what you originally posted, unfortunately others seem to have not read the thread and therefore answered something that has not been asked! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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