The VAT annual accounting scheme lets eligible UK businesses file just one VAT return a year instead of four, paying instalments on account during the year and a balancing payment with the return. It can be a useful cash-flow planning tool for stable businesses but is not a fit for everyone, and Making Tax Digital adds extra considerations.

How the scheme works

You estimate your annual VAT and pay it across the year, smoothing cash flow.

ItemDetail
Eligibility (turnover)Up to £1.35 million in the next 12 months
Exit threshold£1.6 million
Returns per year1
Payments per year9 monthly or 3 quarterly instalments
Balancing paymentWith annual return, two months after period end

You can also combine annual accounting with the flat rate scheme or cash accounting.

Worked example

A consultancy with stable annual VAT liability of £24,000, on the monthly schedule:

MonthPayment
Months 4 to 12£2,400 monthly (10% × £24,000)
With annual returnBalance based on actual VAT for year
If actual is £25,000Pay £3,400 with return
If actual is £22,000Refund £200 with return

Compared with quarterly returns, the business gives up some VAT cash flow but gains predictability.

Pros

  • Single return to prepare each year — less admin
  • Predictable cash flow with monthly instalments
  • Two months extra to file vs quarterly returns
  • Combines well with flat rate and cash accounting schemes
  • Smaller chance of late filing penalties — only one deadline
  • Particularly useful for seasonal businesses that can shape instalments

Cons

  • Refund-position businesses can wait up to a year to recover VAT
  • Growth past £1.6m forces an exit mid-year
  • Estimates can leave large balancing payment surprises
  • Less continuous data flow into management accounts
  • Still subject to Making Tax Digital record-keeping rules
  • HMRC can vary instalments if it disagrees with your estimate

Who it suits

Business profileLikely fit
Stable consultancy or servicesGood
Seasonal retail with year-round bookkeepingGood
Construction subcontractor in CIS reverse chargeMixed
High-growth startupPoor (will exceed £1.6m)
Frequent VAT refundsPoor (cash flow lost)
Pre-revenue with high input VATPoor

Final thoughts

Run a 12-month VAT cash-flow projection before joining or leaving. Pair this with our VAT flat rate scheme article, the VAT registration threshold guide, and the Making Tax Digital explainer. Cross-check on the HMRC annual accounting guidance . See pricing for software that handles annual accounting and MTD.