VAT Group Registration
VAT group registration allows related businesses to register as a single VAT entity, eliminating VAT on transactions between group members. This guide covers eligibility, how to apply, and the advantages and risks of VAT grouping.
What is a VAT Group?
A VAT group is an arrangement where two or more related corporate bodies register for VAT as a single taxable person. Instead of each company having its own VAT registration, the group operates under one VAT registration number with one representative member responsible for filing returns and making payments.
Supplies between group members are disregarded for VAT purposes, meaning no VAT is charged on intra-group transactions. Only supplies made to or received from parties outside the group are subject to VAT.
Eligibility for VAT Grouping
To form a VAT group, the following conditions must be met:
- Each member must be a body corporate (limited company, LLP, or other corporate entity established by law)
- All members must be established or have a fixed establishment in the UK
- The members must be under common control — this can be through ownership, financial interdependence, or organisational links
Control Test
HMRC applies the control test broadly. Common control exists where:
| Type of control | Example |
|---|---|
| One company controls the other | A parent company and its subsidiary |
| Both are controlled by the same person | Two companies owned by the same individual |
| Both are controlled by the same group | Sister companies within a corporate group |
| Financial, economic, and organisational links | Companies with shared management and intertwined operations |
Sole traders and partnerships (other than LLPs) cannot join a VAT group because they are not bodies corporate.
The Representative Member
One company is appointed as the representative member of the group. This company:
- Holds the group’s single VAT registration number
- Submits VAT returns on behalf of the entire group
- Makes VAT payments to HMRC and receives any refunds
- Is the primary point of contact for HMRC enquiries
The representative member acts as agent for the group in all VAT matters. Other group members do not submit separate VAT returns.
How Intra-Group Supplies Work
The principal benefit of VAT grouping is the treatment of supplies between members:
| Transaction type | VAT treatment |
|---|---|
| Sales between group members | Disregarded — no VAT charged |
| Purchases between group members | Disregarded — no VAT charged |
| Sales from a group member to an external customer | VAT charged as normal |
| Purchases by a group member from an external supplier | VAT charged as normal; input tax recovery by the group |
This eliminates the VAT cash flow cost of intercompany transactions. Without grouping, a supply from Company A to Company B within the same corporate group would attract VAT, requiring Company B to pay VAT and then reclaim it on its next return.
Benefits of VAT Grouping
Cash Flow
By eliminating VAT on internal transactions, grouping removes the need to fund VAT payments between related companies while waiting for input tax recovery.
Simplified Administration
One VAT return covers the entire group, reducing the number of returns filed and payments managed. This is particularly valuable for groups with many subsidiaries.
Partial Exemption
Where some group members make exempt supplies and others make taxable supplies, grouping can allow the group’s partial exemption calculation to be performed on an aggregate basis. This may produce a more favourable input tax recovery position than if each company calculated partial exemption separately.
Property Transactions
VAT grouping is commonly used in property structures. Where a property-owning company has opted to tax its building and leases it to a connected operating company, grouping eliminates the VAT charge on the rent.
Risks and Disadvantages
Joint and Several Liability
All members of a VAT group are jointly and severally liable for the group’s VAT debts. If the representative member fails to pay, HMRC can pursue any member of the group for the full amount owed.
This risk is particularly relevant when:
- A group member is being sold or demerged
- A group member becomes insolvent
- The group includes companies with different credit profiles
Anti-Avoidance
HMRC may refuse a VAT group application, or direct that a company be added to or removed from a group, where the grouping arrangement is used to obtain a tax advantage. This power is set out in Schedule 1 to the VAT Act 1994.
Complexity on Changes
Adding or removing members requires notification to HMRC. If a company leaves the group (for example, through a sale), the transition must be managed carefully to ensure:
- The departing company obtains its own VAT registration if needed
- Outstanding VAT liabilities are properly allocated
- Intra-group asset transfers are correctly treated (potential deemed supply)
Impact on Input Tax Recovery
If a group member making only exempt supplies joins the group, the group’s overall input tax recovery percentage may decrease because the partial exemption calculation is now performed at group level.
How to Apply
Applications are made using VAT form VAT50 (application to register a group) and VAT51 (details of group members). The forms are submitted to HMRC’s VAT Registration Service.
The application should include:
- Details of the proposed representative member
- Details of all companies to join the group
- Evidence of common control (e.g., group structure charts, shareholding details)
- The proposed effective date of the group registration
HMRC typically processes group registration applications within 30 working days, though complex applications may take longer.
Changes to the Group
| Change | Notification required |
|---|---|
| Adding a new member | VAT form VAT51 |
| Removing a member | VAT form VAT51 |
| Changing the representative member | VAT form VAT56 |
| Dissolving the group | Written notification to HMRC |
Changes take effect from the date agreed with HMRC or the date specified in the notification. Backdating changes is generally not permitted.
Deemed Supplies on Leaving a Group
When a company leaves a VAT group, it is treated as if the representative member has made a supply of any assets on which input tax was recovered while the company was a group member. This creates a potential deemed supply and VAT liability.
The deemed supply rules apply to assets such as:
- Capital goods on which input tax was claimed
- Stock and work in progress
- Land and property where the option to tax applies
However, the deemed supply can be avoided if the departing company immediately registers for VAT and takes the assets with it, or if the capital goods scheme adjustments are properly managed.
When VAT Grouping Makes Sense
VAT grouping is most beneficial for corporate groups that:
- Have significant intercompany transactions subject to VAT
- Include companies making mixed supplies (taxable and exempt)
- Want to simplify VAT administration across multiple entities
- Are involved in property structures with opted-to-tax buildings
It is less beneficial where group members are all fully taxable with minimal intercompany activity, or where the joint and several liability risk is a concern due to the financial position of certain members.