The New Reality of UK VAT Rates
Understanding VAT is the foundation of any successful eCommerce strategy. In 2026, the standard UK VAT rate remains at 20%. This applies to the vast majority of goods sold online, including electronics, fashion, and homeware. However, misclassifying your products can lead to heavy penalties or lost revenue.
- Standard Rate (20%): Most retail goods.
- Reduced Rate (5%): Items like children’s car seats and certain energy-saving materials.
- Zero Rate (0%): Most unprocessed food, children’s clothes, and printed books.
Pro Tip: Always verify your VAT liability. Applying 20% to a zero-rated item makes you uncompetitive, while applying 0% to a standard-rated item creates a massive tax debt.
Registration Thresholds: Are You Over the Limit?
The rules for when you must register for VAT depend entirely on where your business is “established.”
For UK-Based Sellers
If your business is physically located in the UK, the VAT registration threshold for 2026 stands at £90,000. Once your taxable turnover exceeds this amount in any rolling 12-month period, you must register. Don’t wait until the end of the financial year to check; monitor your rolling turnover monthly to avoid late registration fines.
For Non-UK (Overseas) Sellers
If you are an overseas seller with no physical office in the UK but you store goods in a UK warehouse (like Amazon FBA), the threshold is £0. You must register for UK VAT before you make your very first sale. HMRC has ramped up its cooperation with online marketplaces to identify non-compliant overseas sellers, so ensure your registration is active from day one.
The 2026 Cross-Border Shake-up: Customs and Duty
The most significant change for 2026 involves how we trade with our neighbours in the EU. A major reform is currently reshaping the fashion and retail sectors: the abolition of the EU’s €150 customs duty exemption starting in July 2026.
What does this mean for you? Previously, small shipments under €150 entered the EU duty-free. With this exemption gone, import VAT and customs duties apply to almost all shipments. This levels the playing field against ultra-low-cost overseas competitors, but it also means you must be ready for:
- VAT at Checkout: HMRC and EU authorities now prefer VAT to be collected at the point of sale rather than on delivery.
- Increased Compliance: You will likely need to use schemes like the Import One-Stop Shop (IOSS) to manage these low-value consignments efficiently.
- Pricing Adjustments: You must factor in these duties now to ensure your “landed cost” doesn’t eat your entire profit margin.
Making Tax Digital (MTD): No More Spreadsheets
By 2026, Making Tax Digital is no longer an “option”: it is the standard. HMRC requires all VAT-registered businesses to keep digital records and use functional compatible software to submit their returns.
If you are still manually entering data into spreadsheets, you are at risk. Digital links are mandatory, meaning the data must flow from your sales platform (Shopify, Amazon, eBay) into your accounting software without “cut and paste” intervention.
Avoiding the Dreaded HMRC Investigation
HMRC is using more sophisticated AI tools in 2026 to flag inconsistencies in tax returns. Discrepancies between what you report and what your payment processor (Stripe, PayPal) reports are the fastest way to trigger an audit.
To stay off the radar:
- Reconcile Daily: Ensure your bookkeeping matches your bank feeds and marketplace statements.
- Claim Correct Expenses: Only claim what is “wholly and exclusively” for business.
- Be Transparent: If you make a mistake, disclose it to HMRC before they find it. Voluntary disclosure usually results in much lower penalties.
Marketplace Responsibility: The “Full Disclosure” Era
If you sell on Amazon, eBay, or Etsy, remember that these platforms are legally “deemed suppliers” for VAT purposes in many cases. This means the marketplace often collects the VAT from the customer and pays it to HMRC directly.
However, this does not exempt you from record-keeping. You must still report these sales on your VAT return as “zero-rated” or “deemed” sales to ensure your total turnover is accurately reflected. Failure to do this can make it look like you are under-reporting your business size, which leads to unwanted questions from tax authorities.
Checklist: Your 2026 Compliance Action Plan
To thrive this year, follow this structured approach to your UK accounting:
- Audit Your VAT Rates: Review your entire product catalogue to ensure the 20% or 0% rates are applied correctly.
- Check Your Thresholds: If you’re approaching £90,000, start the registration process early.
- Update Your Cross-Border Strategy: If you ship to the EU, prepare for the July 2026 duty changes now.
- Go Fully Digital: Move away from manual records and ensure your software is MTD-compliant.
- Review Overseas Obligations: If you are a non-UK entity, ensure you have a valid UK VAT number and EORI number.
FAQ: UK Tax Updates 2026
What is the VAT registration threshold for 2026?
The threshold for UK-established businesses is £90,000. For non-UK businesses selling goods stored in the UK, the threshold is £0.
When do the new EU customs duty changes take effect?
The abolition of the €150 customs duty exemption takes effect in July 2026.





