“Evidence of export
consists of two types, official and commercial. For VAT purposes there is no
mandatory requirement to retain official evidence of export so equal emphasis
should be placed on the acceptance of either official or commercial evidence
to substantiate zero-rating. The official and commercial transport evidence
must be supported by other supplementary documentation associated with the
supply, such as the customer’s order, inter-company correspondence, despatch
note, acknowledgement of receipt, evidence of payment, etc.” Full details on
the supplementary evidence required are in Notice 703 Export of goods from
the United Kingdom. Taken together, the transport and supplementary evidence
must show that a transaction has taken place and the goods have actually left
the Community.
Official evidence is
normally:
Commercial evidence
comprises two types:
Primary (eg Master
air waybills)
Secondary (eg
authenticated house air or sea waybills).
Along with these
transport documents you will also have to provide your own commercial
documentation, including payment details, as a basket of evidence. Ensure the transport documents show clear
details of how the goods moved along with the endorsement that they have
flown or been shipped. This is a
problem with FPOs because the consignment notes are not acceptable as commercial
evidence. HMRC advise that Audit Officers will accept the FPO Global
Certificate of Shipment and Air Waybill for VAT zero rating purposes. Also,
it is advisable to obtain and retain the Proof of Export (POD) showing the
date and signature the goods were received by the customer.
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Tuesday, 9 April 2013
Evidence of Shipment
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