My second article published on AccountingWeb covered the first tier tribunal case of UK Funerals Online Limited (UKFO). The case looked at whether the repatriation services supplied by UKFO, both to and from the UK, should be zero rated or exempt.
Essentially, the deciding factor was whether the services should be classified as “the disposal of the remains of the dead” and “the making of arrangements for or in connection with the disposal of the remains of the dead” OR whether is could be classified as “the transport of goods from a place within to a place outside the United Kingdom or vice versa, to the extent that those services are supplied within the United Kingdom”.
Services in connection with the disposal of the dead are VAT exempt, which HMRC argued should apply to UKFO’s repatriation services as they very clearly involved the making arrangements for or in connection with the disposal of the remains of the dead.
UKFO argued that the service should be zero rated, as airlines treat transport of a dead body as cargo, not as a passenger. “The transport of goods from a place within to a place outside the United Kingdom or vice versa, to the extent that those services are supplied within the United Kingdom” is zero rated.
The court concluded that the repatriation service fell within both the zero rating and the exemption, and in that case, zero rating takes precedence. |