MEPs have voted on a new Directive setting out how large online platforms are to contribute to closing loopholes that hinder the collection of VAT.
The new rules aim to help member states recover an estimated €5 billion in tax revenues lost in the e-commerce sector every year, a figure expected to rise to €7 billion by 2020. In 2017, the unpaid VAT due from all economic sectors in the EU was calculated to stand at around €137 billion.
The Directive supplements the VAT e-commerce directive, approved in 2017, and due to enter into force in 2021. It details how online platforms such as the marketplaces of Amazon or ebay are to execute the responsibility they will have from 2021 to ensure that VAT is collected on sales to EU consumers.
The Directive sets out the records that platforms must keep on the sales made to help national authorities calculate how much VAT is due, even when sellers from outside the EU have not complied with paying the VAT. At the moment, it is difficult for member states to obtain the VAT due on goods sold from outside the EU if the seller does not properly declare these sales.
MEPs have agreed on the changes to the European Commission proposal put forward by member states to clarify which member state will be administratively competent for a specific sale, and when an online platform is to be considered as having a role in a sale, and therefore ultimately responsible for ensuring the VAT is collected. MEPs also agreed that the reporting requirements should be supplemented to obtain a breakdown of the VAT due per member state.
The Council will now need to adopt the final position on the Directive. The European Parliament has a consultative role.