When to Register for VAT
Know when you must register for VAT, when voluntary registration pays off and what to do once registered.
Deciding when to register for VAT is one of the more consequential calls you will make as a business owner. Register too late and you risk penalties and a backdated bill to HMRC; register too early and you may add cost and admin you did not need. Whether you trade as a sole trader or run a limited company, the rules are the same: registration depends on your VAT taxable turnover, not your profit, and it can be either compulsory or a deliberate choice. This guide walks through the threshold, the case for voluntary registration, how to register and what happens with your first return.
The VAT registration threshold
You must register for VAT once your VAT taxable turnover exceeds the registration threshold. There are two tests, and either one can trigger a requirement to register:
- The backward look: your taxable turnover over the previous rolling 12 months goes above the threshold. This is a moving window, not your accounting year or the tax year.
- The forward look: you expect your taxable turnover to exceed the threshold within the next 30 days alone, for example because you have just won a large contract.
VAT taxable turnover is the total of everything you sell that is not exempt from VAT, including standard-rated, reduced-rated and zero-rated supplies. It excludes genuinely exempt income and supplies outside the scope of UK VAT. Because the test is rolling, you should review your running total at the end of every month rather than waiting for the year-end.
Compulsory versus voluntary registration
It helps to keep the two routes clearly separate:
| Type | When it applies | Effective date |
|---|---|---|
| Compulsory | Turnover crosses the threshold on the backward or forward look | Set by the test you breached |
| Voluntary | You choose to register while still below the threshold | A date you nominate, within limits |
With compulsory registration, the clock matters. If you breach the threshold on the backward look, you generally have a fixed window to notify HMRC, and registration takes effect from the first day of the second month after you went over. If you breach on the forward look, you must register from the date you realised you would exceed it. Missing these deadlines can lead to a late registration penalty and a backdated liability, so monitoring your turnover is essential.
Benefits of voluntary registration
Registering before you are required to can make commercial sense, particularly if your customers are themselves VAT registered.
- Reclaiming input VAT: you can recover VAT on eligible business purchases, equipment and overheads, which is valuable if you carry significant costs.
- Credibility: a VAT number can make a small business look more established to larger clients.
- Zero-rated or repayment positions: if you mostly sell zero-rated goods but buy standard-rated supplies, you may regularly reclaim more than you charge.
- Avoiding a cliff edge: registering early smooths the transition rather than forcing a sudden price or system change later.
The trade-offs are real, though. If you sell mainly to the public or to non-registered businesses, adding VAT effectively raises your prices or squeezes your margin. You also take on quarterly returns and Making Tax Digital obligations. Weigh this against your customer base before deciding, and consider how it interacts with choosing the right VAT scheme so the scheme matches your cost profile.
The registration process
You register online through your HMRC account, and most businesses receive a VAT number within a few weeks. Before you start, gather:
- Your business details, including your Companies House number if you are a limited company.
- Your turnover figures and the date you crossed, or expect to cross, the threshold.
- Your bank details and the date you want registration to take effect.
Once registered, you will need MTD-compatible software to keep digital records and submit returns. Setting this up early avoids a scramble before your first deadline.
Choosing your effective date
For voluntary registration, you can usually choose your effective date of registration within a permitted backward and forward range. A backdated date lets you reclaim earlier input VAT but means charging VAT from that point. A future date gives you time to update pricing, invoices and systems first. Pick the date that best balances recoverable VAT against the admin of issuing or correcting invoices around the changeover.
Deregistration rules
You can deregister when your circumstances change. Voluntary deregistration is available if your taxable turnover falls below the deregistration threshold and you expect it to stay there. Compulsory deregistration applies if you stop making taxable supplies altogether, for example because you cease trading or sell the business.
Two points often catch people out:
- You may owe VAT on stock and assets on hand at deregistration if you reclaimed VAT when you bought them.
- You must keep your VAT records for the required retention period even after you deregister.
First return and pre-registration VAT
Your first VAT return often covers a slightly longer or shorter period than usual, depending on the stagger HMRC allocates. A useful feature is pre-registration VAT: you can usually reclaim VAT on goods bought before registration that you still hold and use in the business, and on certain services received shortly before registering, subject to the standard time limits and conditions.
To get the first return right:
- Reconcile your sales and purchases from your effective date onward.
- Identify eligible pre-registration purchases with valid VAT invoices.
- Check your figures before you submit, as explained in our guide on how to complete a VAT return .
Done carefully, your first submission sets a clean baseline for every return that follows.