Takeaway Owner Ordered To Repay More Than £70,000 After Luxury Spending: What This UK VAT And Bankruptcy Case Means For Small Businesses

Published by Farazia Gillani posted in Value Added Tax (VAT), VAT on 23 February 2026

In mid-February 2026, a former Portsmouth takeaway owner was ordered to repay more than £70,000 by the Crown Court after the Insolvency Service traced cash withdrawals and luxury spending that, in the authorities’ view, should have gone towards a substantial VAT debt. 

At Apex Accountants, we see cases like this as a hard warning for sole traders and hospitality businesses. VAT, cash flow, and record-keeping issues can escalate quickly. When they overlap with insolvency and alleged asset concealment, consequences can become criminal, not just financial. 

Why Was Takeaway Owner Ordered To Repay More Than £70,000

The UK VAT and bankruptcy case centres on Zhang Jin Chen (52), formerly the owner of the Fortune House takeaway in Portsmouth, run as a sole trader.  Key events reported by the Insolvency Service and published on GOV.UK include

  • The business was registered with HM Revenue and Customs in February 2012, but it was not registered for VAT at that time. 
  • HMRC visited in February 2020 and found evidence suggesting the business should have been VAT registered since December 2012 (meaning VAT should have been accounted for years earlier). 
  • In October 2020, Chen and his ex-wife sold their jointly owned home. Over the next two months, Chen withdrew large cash sums, including two withdrawals of £30,000 in November 2020. 
  • During November and December 2020, he spent more than £3,500 on products from Apple and a further £880 at Burberry shortly before Christmas. 
  • He applied for bankruptcy in July 2021, stating he knew he owed VAT but could not repay his debts. 
  • In May 2025, he received a 12-month prison sentence suspended for 18 months, after being found guilty of fraudulently disposing of property as a bankrupt under the Insolvency Act 1986. 
  • On 13 February 2026, at Portsmouth Crown Court, he was made subject to a confiscation order of £62,755 (payable within three months) plus £8,000 in costs—taking the total to more than £70,000. 
  • The Insolvency Service warned he could face 18 months in prison if he fails to pay, and that imprisonment would not wipe the debt. 

The Insolvency Service also reported that Chen signed a five-year Bankruptcy Restrictions Undertaking (BRU) which runs until March 2027, limiting borrowing and restricting certain public roles. 

Why this Became a Criminal and Insolvency Matter

This story is not “just” about unpaid VAT. It sits at the intersection of VAT compliance, bankruptcy law, and criminal asset recovery. 

Fraudulent Disposal and Bankruptcy Restrictions

Under the Insolvency Act 1986, there are criminal offences relating to wrongdoing before and after bankruptcy, including “fraudulent disposal of property” in the five years leading up to bankruptcy. That legal framework is the basis the Insolvency Service referenced when reporting Chen’s conviction

A Bankruptcy Restrictions Undertaking (BRU) is essentially an agreement that imposes extended restrictions (often for 2 to 15 years in broader cases) without the matter necessarily going to court for a Bankruptcy Restrictions Order. GOV.UK guidance lists restrictions that can apply, including limits around obtaining credit over £500 without disclosure and restrictions on acting as a company director. 

Confiscation Orders and Why Prison Does Not Clear the Debt

Confiscation orders are made under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 (POCA) and can only be made by the Crown Court. They are not a sentence by themselves. They sit alongside a criminal sentence. 

Two points UK business owners often miss:

  • The court sets a time to pay, and it can also set a “default sentence” for non-payment. 
  • Serving a default sentence does not remove the obligation to pay. Government explanatory notes and prosecution guidance make clear the debt can remain outstanding. 

In this UK VAT and bankruptcy Case, the Insolvency Service stated that the £62,755 confiscation figure covered the HMRC debt plus an uplift to reflect today’s value of money. 

VAT Lessons for Takeaway and Hospitality Owners

Hospitality is high-volume and often cash-heavy. That can make VAT compliance more complex, not less. The Chen case also highlights how VAT liabilities can be assessed retrospectively when HMRC believes the registration threshold was exceeded years earlier. 

When you must register for VAT in the UK

As of the current rules reflected on GOV.UK, you must register for VAT if your taxable turnover in the last 12 months goes over £90,000, and you must register within 30 days of the end of the month you exceeded the threshold. 

That “rolling 12 months” point is critical. It does not reset at the end of the tax year. 

Record-keeping is not optional

If you are VAT registered, HMRC expects you to keep VAT records for at least six years in most cases. This is set out in VAT record-keeping guidance and GOV.UK VAT record rules. 

Making Tax Digital (MTD) makes this operationally stricter. VAT-registered businesses must keep VAT records digitally and file VAT returns using compatible software (with limited exceptions). 

A practical compliance checklist we recommend for hospitality businesses:

  • Track turnover monthly against the rolling 12-month VAT threshold, not calendar-year totals. 
  • Keep till reports, daily sales summaries, and bank deposit records, and reconcile cash takings to cash banked. This reduces risk in an HMRC visit or enquiry. 
  • Keep VAT records for the required retention period (typically six years). 
  • If VAT cashflow is tight, explore legitimate VAT accounting schemes (for example, the Cash Accounting Scheme) where eligible, to align VAT payments closer to when customers pay. 
  • If you cannot pay a tax bill on time, contact HMRC early. A payment plan may be possible, but HMRC will assess affordability and expects realism. 
  • Keep filing returns on time even if payment is difficult, because late submission carries its own penalty structure. 

How We Help With Managing VAT For Takeaway and Hospitality Businesses in UK

At Apex Accountants, we help UK sole traders and limited companies stay compliant, stay organised, and stay out of trouble. We also support businesses when problems have already started.

Our core VAT services for hospitality and owner-managed businesses include:

  • VAT registration reviews, including checking rolling 12-month turnover and the correct effective date of registration. 
  • VAT returns support and Making Tax Digital (MTD) set-up, so your records and filing process meet HMRC’s digital requirements. 
  • Bookkeeping systems for cash-heavy businesses, including processes to reconcile cash takings and strengthen audit trails. 
  • VAT record retention and compliance checks (including the six-year VAT record rule). 
  • Support engaging with HMRC early if you cannot pay on time, including preparing figures for a payment plan discussion. 
  • Practical advice when insolvency risk is rising, including signposting restrictions and responsibilities so you avoid conduct that regulators may treat as wrongdoing. 

Conclusion

The February 2026 confiscation order against Zhang Jin Chen is a clear reminder that VAT debts do not disappear when a business faces financial pressure or enters bankruptcy. Investigators can trace transactions years later, and courts can order full repayment. In serious cases, enforcement can include a prison sentence, and the debt still remains payable.

For business owners, understanding VAT for takeaway and hospitality businesses in UK is essential. You must monitor the VAT threshold, register at the correct time, and keep accurate digital records in line with HMRC requirements. If cash flow becomes tight, early action is critical. Speaking to a qualified advisor can help you manage liabilities before they escalate into compliance issues or enforcement action.If you are unsure about your VAT position or worried about potential liabilities, it is always better to act early. Contact Apex Accountants today for practical, professional advice tailored to your business. You can call us or visit our website to discuss your situation in confidence.

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