
Vouchers (such as gift cards, book tokens or phone top-ups) are widely used by businesses to attract and retain customers, but the rules around VAT on vouchers can be complex. Since 1 January 2019, the UK has aligned its legislation with EU rules to clarify when VAT becomes due. Under these rules, a voucher, whether physical or digital, is treated as an instrument that can be accepted as payment for goods or services up to a specified face value. However, it is important to note that money-off coupons or discount vouchers are not treated as face-value vouchers for VAT purposes.
The key to applying the correct treatment lies in understanding whether a voucher is classified as a single-purpose voucher (SPV) or a multi-purpose voucher (MPV), as each category determines when VAT must be accounted for and how it impacts your business.
A voucher gives the holder a right to redeem it for identifiable goods or services up to its face value. For VAT, this includes gift cards or e-vouchers you pay for in advance and later exchange for specific products or services. It excludes things like “money off” coupons, loyalty points, debit cards or stored-value cards without a specified redemption item.
Previously, UK law called vouchers “face-value vouchers,” defined as tokens or stamps entitling the bearer to goods or services of the value stated. Under current law, the focus is on when the underlying supply takes place.
VAT law now classifies a voucher as either single-purpose (SPV) or multi-purpose (MPV):
At the time the voucher is issued, the place of supply and VAT rate of the underlying goods/services are known. In other words, an SPV is tied to a specific supply at a single VAT rate.
For example, a gift card redeemable only for standard-rated books, or a phone top-up card usable only for telecom services (if those services have one rate), would be SPVs. VAT is charged immediately when the voucher is sold (issued) and on each subsequent transfer of the voucher. This means the seller accounts for VAT on the voucher’s face value upfront. If the voucher is never redeemed, the VAT still stays due – the issuer cannot escape the tax by non-redemption.
If either the place of supply or VAT rate is unknown at issue, the voucher is multi-purpose. MPVs give the customer flexibility (e.g., a tourism pass or a voucher valid at many outlets with different VAT rates). Because the eventual use is uncertain, VAT is only due when the voucher is actually redeemed for specific goods or services.
All prior sales or transfers of the MPV are not taxable supplies, and no VAT is charged or invoice issued until redemption. For example, a “city sightseeing pass” offering access to attractions (some exempt, some zero-rated, some standard-rated) was held by a tribunal to be an MPV, so VAT was only payable when the pass was used.
Key takeaway: Is the final supply known at voucher issue?
If yes (SPV), VAT on sale; if no (MPV), VAT on redemption.
VAT is due immediately when the voucher is sold (or any time it is transferred), because the VAT on the underlying supply can be determined up front. The issue or sale of the voucher is treated just like selling the actual goods or services. The seller charges VAT on the sale price of the voucher and remits it to HMRC. For example, if a £50 gift voucher for a shop’s standard-rated goods is sold, the seller accounts for £50 of VAT due at that point.
No VAT is due on the sale or transfer of the voucher itself. Instead, the VAT charge is postponed until redemption, when the actual goods/services are supplied. At redemption, the consideration is usually the face value (or last sale price) of the voucher. For example, a £50 tourism voucher (redeemable for various services) incurs VAT when the holder finally uses it to buy a museum ticket or ride a bus; the issuer (redeemer) then accounts for VAT on that £50.
For VAT, we look at where the underlying supply happens – not where the voucher was bought or sold. The HMRC guidance highlights that if a voucher can be used in multiple EU countries (or outside the UK), its place of supply can’t be known at issue, making it an MPV.
Since MPVs are not taxed until redemption, any sale or resale of an MPV is outside the scope of VAT – meaning no VAT invoice is issued by the intermediary. This also means businesses cannot claim input VAT on expenses used to buy MPVs that they later resell, because no VAT was charged on those transactions.
A gift card valid at one store (all items at one VAT rate) is typically an SPV – VAT at sale. A gift card valid at many stores or for various products/rates is an MPV – VAT at redemption.
If only used for telecom services at a known rate, it’s an SPV (VAT when sold). If it also buys transport tickets or other services at different rates, it becomes an MPV.
The Go City Ltd case (FTT Aug 2024) involved London attraction passes. The tribunal ruled these were multi-purpose vouchers because users could choose among attractions with different VAT treatments. Therefore, VAT was only due on redemption.
The EU’s Court of Justice (Apr 2024, C-68/23) decided on German video content vouchers (redeemable only in Germany but sold elsewhere). It held they were SPVs (use limited to one country), so VAT was due on each resale of the voucher. This highlights that even cross-border sales are taxed as SPVs if their actual use was fixed.
Misclassifying an SPV as an MPV (or vice versa) can lead to under- or over-paying VAT. Always check what goods/services the voucher can buy and where they’ll be supplied.
For SPVs, account for VAT at sale; for MPVs, only at redemption. This affects invoices, bookkeeping and cash flow.
Only supplies that incur VAT allow the seller to reclaim input tax. Since MPV transfers are VAT-free, the seller cannot recover VAT on those transactions.
If a voucher can be spent in different countries or on items with different VAT rates, it’s very likely an MPV. For example, vouchers accepted in several EU member states are MPVs because the place of supply was not known at issue.
The VAT rules on vouchers are complex and have evolved with recent cases. Businesses should review any voucher schemes (especially new ones) and seek expert advice if unsure.
At Apex Accountants, we help businesses navigate VAT rules on vouchers and beyond. Our VAT specialists can:
We provide VAT compliance and advisory services tailored to your business, including international and digital services VAT. Our team stays up-to-date on the latest legislation and cases, so you can focus on your business.
Voucher schemes are a useful marketing tool, but the VAT rules are intricate. Since 2019, UK law has followed EU principles: single-purpose vouchers (known final supply) trigger VAT on issue, whereas multi-purpose vouchers (uncertain use) only incur VAT on redemption. Recent tribunal and CJEU cases reinforce these principles. To avoid errors, businesses should carefully assess their vouchers’ characteristics and get specialist guidance.
If you’re using or planning voucher-based promotions, speak to our VAT experts at Apex. We can clarify the rules, assess your setup, and ensure your VAT treatment is spot-on.
VAT depends on the type of voucher. Single-purpose vouchers are taxed when issued, since VAT treatment is already known. Multi-purpose vouchers are taxed only when redeemed because the final supply and VAT rate are not determined earlier.
It depends on the voucher type. For multi-purpose vouchers, no VAT is charged on purchase, so there is nothing to reclaim. For single-purpose vouchers, input VAT may be recoverable if the underlying expense qualifies under normal VAT rules.
Vouchers are not automatically tax exempt. Their VAT treatment depends on how they are structured. Some transactions may be outside the scope of VAT initially, but VAT will usually apply either at issue or redemption, depending on the voucher type.
For VAT purposes, vouchers are not treated as goods or services. Instead, they represent a right to receive goods or services in the future. VAT is applied to the underlying supply, not to the voucher itself in most cases.
HMRC classifies vouchers into single-purpose and multi-purpose categories. The key factor is whether the VAT rate and place of supply are known at issue. This classification determines when VAT must be accounted for under UK legislation.
If a voucher can be used for goods with different VAT rates, no VAT is charged when it is sold. VAT becomes due only when the voucher is redeemed, based on the goods or services supplied at that time.
Gift vouchers are usually neither exempt nor zero-rated. Their treatment depends on whether they are single-purpose or multi-purpose. VAT may be due at issue or redemption, rather than applying a specific exemption or zero rate.
Employers usually cannot reclaim VAT on multi-purpose vouchers, since no VAT is charged at purchase. For single-purpose vouchers, recovery may be possible, but business gift rules may require output VAT if values exceed £50 per person annually.
A single-purpose voucher is one where the place of supply and VAT rate are known when issued. VAT is charged at the point of sale and on each transfer, with no additional VAT due when it is redeemed.
Multi-purpose vouchers are those where the VAT rate or place of supply is unknown at issue. VAT is not charged when sold. Instead, VAT is accounted for when the voucher is redeemed for goods or services.
Where vouchers are used as payment, VAT is usually calculated on the amount actually paid or redeemed. If a voucher is sold at a discount, VAT is often based on the discounted value when goods or services are supplied.
In the UK, VAT rules for vouchers focus on timing. Businesses must identify whether a voucher is single-purpose or multi-purpose, as this determines whether VAT is due at sale or only when goods or services are provided.
A cautionary tale of unpaid taxes In mid-April 2026, the Insolvency Service disqualified Alex Shorthose from serving as a director...
From 6 April 2026, self-employed childminders with qualifying income over £50,000 must use Making Tax Digital for Income Tax. The...
A sticky dispute that went all the way back to tribunal In late March 2026 the First‑tier Tribunal (Tax Chamber)...
In a recent case in Glasgow, two restaurant owners were found guilty of carrying out nearly a £700,000 VAT fraud...
Starbucks UK’s tax credit situation highlights that sales growth does not necessarily lead to tax liabilities. Despite reporting a turnover...
The UK’s new packaging EPR rules (often called the “packaging tax”) took effect on 1 January 2025. Any company with...
Close companies (broadly, those controlled by five or fewer shareholders or participators) and their owners have new reporting requirements under...
UK VAT law imposes strict restrictions on VAT recovery for business cars that also serve private purposes. Generally, businesses cannot...
In the UK, most company cars (and vans) used for private purposes fall under benefit-in-kind taxation. The value is calculated...
What was the HMRC v Colchester institute VAT dispute about? Colchester Institute — a further education college in Essex —...