EU has not yet reached agreement on VAT in the digital age (ViDA) proposal

On 14 May 2024, the Economic and Financial Affairs Council (ECOFIN) of the European Union (EU) met to discuss changes to the EU Value Added Tax (VAT) rules as part of the VAT in the digital age (ViDA) initiative, based on a revised proposal for a Council Directive issued on 8 May 2024. However, the Ministers did not reach an agreement on the changes and discussions will continue with a view to reaching a compromise that all 27 Member States can approve.

Nonetheless, an agreement could still be achieved under Belgian presidency (which ends on 30 June 2024). It is expected that there could be a compromise proposal in the short term, as only one Member State was opposed to parts of the package related to the Platform Economy.

Background

The ViDA initiative is a package of fundamental changes to the common VAT rules across the EU with three pillars and gradual implementation dates. It aims to ensure VAT compliance, prevent tax fraud and elevate the VAT regulations to the next level, fitting the needs of the digital age. Only after the EU Member States' Finance Ministers have reached a political agreement can further legislative steps be taken to implement the package.

The three ViDA pillars may be summarized as:

  1. Digital Reporting Requirements (DRR) — Introducing common standardized Digital Reporting Requirements and e-invoicing for intra-community transactions (i.e., between Member States)
  2. Platform Economy — Addressing the challenges of the platform economy for short-term rental of accommodation and passenger transport services by enhancing the role of digital platforms in collecting VAT
  3. Single VAT Registration — Reducing VAT registration requirements in the EU by expanding the scope of the One Stop Shop (OSS) for imports and the reverse charge for business-to-business (B2B) transactions

Initially, it was intended that the new rules were to be implemented generally in 2025 and the DRR rules were to apply as of 2028. With a few exceptions, the implementation dates are postponed, possibly to July 2027 (for the Platform Economy and Single VAT Registration reforms) and to the period 2030 to 2035 for DRR and the new e-invoicing rules, including grandfathering rules for current e-invoicing systems for individual Member States. However, all dates are to be confirmed as well as any grandfathering of current e-invoicing systems for individual Member States.

Despite the lack of final agreement, businesses operating in the EU need to assess how their transactions, invoicing and reporting processes are affected and how they may set up their systems to ensure that their future VAT reporting requirements are met.

Further, despite the delay to the EU DRR rules, many Member States have already introduced or are in the process of introducing, domestic e-invoicing and e-reporting rules sooner than 2028. Therefore, businesses should also consider undertaking a readiness assessment for their ability to comply with those rules, if they have not already done so.

The next ECOFIN meeting is scheduled for 21 June 2024 — watch for another EY Global Tax Alert following that meeting.

Contact Information

For additional information concerning this Alert, please contact:

EY Tax GmbH Steuerberatungsgesellschaft (Germany)
  • Rene Guetschow, Eschborn
  • Matthias Luther, Hamburg
Ernst & Young Tax Consultants (Belgium) Ghent
  • Matthias Penninck
Ernst & Young Belastingadviseurs LLP (Netherlands) Amsterdam
  • Folkert Gaarlandt
Associée EY Société d'Avocats (France) Paris
  • Gwenaelle Bernier
Ernst & Young LLP (United Kingdom) London
  • Ben Woodfield, re DRR
  • Chris Taylor, re DRR
  • Alex Hale, re Platform Economy
  • Ethan Ding, re Platform Economy and Single VAT Registration
  • Gaurav Patney, re Single VAT Registration

Published by NTD’s Tax Technical Knowledge Services group; Carolyn Wright, legal editor

For a full listing of contacts and email addresses, please click on the Tax News Update: Global Edition (GTNU) version of this Alert.

Download this